1. Distribution patterns of carabid beetle species at the landscape-level.
- Author
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Judas, Michael, Dornieden, Klaus, and Strothmann, Ulrich
- Subjects
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BEETLES , *FORESTS & forestry , *BIOGEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Aim Carabid beetles are known to be affected by abiotic habitat conditions, both at a local microscale and in their distribution between habitat types. We explored whether the non-random distribution at micro- and macroscales is reflected in non-random distribution patterns at an intermediate mesoscale. The aim of this paper is: (1) to identify and to characterize carabid distribution patterns at the meso- or landscape scale; (2) to analyse if patterns can be confirmed between years; and (3) to propose environmental effects that explain the observed patterns. Location We studied a topographically varied area of c. 4 km² within a landscape of continuous beech forests. The study area is situated close to Göttingen, Central Germany, on a limestone plateau and its south- and southeast-facing slopes, at 280–420 m a.s.l. Methods Carabid beetles were sampled with pitfall traps during four consecutive years. Each year 10, 20 or 50 traps km-2 were operated for 4–6 months. We interpolated continuous distribution maps from pitfall sites and correlated species maps between separate years. Spatial autocorrelation was analysed with Mantel tests and correlograms of Moran's I. Results 1. We analysed the spatial distribution of twelve carabid species. All interpolations produced more or less patchy map patterns. No pattern was exactly reproduced between years. 2. Carabid species distribution at the landscape level could be differentiated into four types: random, weak gradient, distinct gradient and restricted area. Maps for species with distinct gradients or restricted distributions were correlated between all years, while maps for species with random patterns were mostly uncorrelated. 3. Mantel tests detected overall spatial autocorrelation (SA) in most species. Correlograms of Moran's I supported the characterization of distribution types. The correlograms indicated patch sizes of 0.8–1.2 km extent for all species but three that were... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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