Temporal variation in the arthropod community of desert riparian habitats with varying amounts of saltcedar (Tamarix ramosissima)
نویسندگان
چکیده
We used Malaise traps to examine the aerial arthropod community in riparian habitats dominated by native willow, exotic saltcedar, or a mixture of these two tree species in central Arizona, USA. Over the course of three sampling periods per year in 2003 and 2004, native habitats had significantly greater diversity (Shannon–Wiener) and supported different arthropod communities compared to exotic habitats, while mixed habitats were intermediate in terms of diversity and supported an arthropod community statistically indistinguishable from the exotic site. The composition of arthropod communities varied significantly between the two years, and there was an approximately two-fold difference in richness and diversity. Overall, we documented complex interactions indicating that differences among the arthropod communities of riparian habitats may be driven not only by the composition of native and exotic tree species making up these habitats, but also by year and season of arthropod sampling. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
منابع مشابه
Genetic and environmental influences on leaf phenology and cold hardiness of native and introduced riparian trees.
To explore the roles of plasticity and genetic variation in the response to spatial and temporal climate variation, we established a common garden consisting of paired collections of native and introduced riparian trees sampled along a latitudinal gradient. The garden in Fort Collins, Colorado (latitude 40.6°N), included 681 native plains cottonwood (Populus deltoides subsp. monilifera) and int...
متن کاملLatitudinal variation in cold hardiness in introduced Tamarix and native Populus
To investigate the evolution of clinal variation in an invasive plant, we compared cold hardiness in the introduced saltcedar (Tamarix ramosissima, Tamarix chinensis, and hybrids) and the native plains cottonwood (Populus deltoides subsp. monilifera). In a shadehouse in Colorado (41°N), we grew plants collected along a latitudinal gradient in the central United States (29-48°N). On 17 occasions...
متن کاملDetection and Classification of Plant Species through Spectir Airborne Hyperspectral Imagery in Clark County, Nevada
The non-native Saltcedar (Tamarix ramosissima Ledeb.) and the native Honey mesquite (Prosopis Glandulosa Torr.), exist in abundance in Clark County, NV. We are using remote sensing to measure changes in distribution and abundance of these species. We collected six strips of 1m-resolution SpecTIR hyperspectral images in Clark County on May, 2005. SpecTIR has 227 spectral bands ranging from 0.45 ...
متن کاملCrayfish Impact Desert River Ecosystem Function and Litter-Dwelling Invertebrate Communities through Association with Novel Detrital Resources
Shifts in plant species distributions due to global change are increasing the availability of novel resources in a variety of ecosystems worldwide. In semiarid riparian areas, hydric pioneer tree species are being replaced by drought-tolerant plant species as water availability decreases. Additionally, introduced omnivorous crayfish, which feed upon primary producers, allochthonous detritus, an...
متن کاملEcohydrology in a Colorado River Riparian Forest: Implications for the Decline of Populus Fremontii
Populus fremontii (Fremont cottonwood) was once a dominant species in desert riparian forests but has been increasingly replaced by the exotic invasive Tamarix ramosissima (saltcedar). Interspecific competition, reduced flooding frequency, and increased salinity have been implicated in the widespread decline of P. fremontii. To elucidate some of the multiple and interacting mechanisms of this d...
متن کامل