Wandering spiders limit densities of a major microbi-detritivore in the forest-floor food web |
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Authors: | David H Wise |
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Institution: | Department of Entomology, University of Kentucky, S-225 Ag Sci Bldg-N, Lexington, KY 40546-0091, USA |
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Abstract: | In a long-term field experiment, densities of wandering spiders (i.e. species that do not build webs to capture prey) were reduced in order to determine whether or not a major group of microbi-detritivores, the Collembola (springtails), would increase in response to lowered spider predation. Thirty 4-m2 fenced plots (15 spider-removal, 15 control plots) and 15 unfenced, undisturbed reference areas were established in a deciduous forest. Spiders were taken from the removal-treatment after being collected by periodic trapping with pitfall traps that contained no preservative, and by searching the litter surface. Judging from a comparison of the numbers captured during periodic censuses in spider-removal and control plots (one census period was two consecutive days of pitfall trapping), wandering spiders were rapidly reduced by ca. 50% and were maintained at levels lower than control plots for 1.3 years. The reduction in numbers was greatest for wolf spiders (Lycosidae; ≈90%). Of six families of Collembola abundant in the leaf litter during the experiment, one family, the Tomoceridae, exhibited a significant release from spider predation. Densities of tomocerids, which are the largest and most active springtails on the research site, gradually increased until they were consistently 2× higher in the spider-removal treatment than in either fenced control plots or unfenced, open reference areas. |
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Keywords: | Author Keywords: Detrital food web Top-down control Wandering spiders Lycosidae Collembola Tomoceridae Field experiment |
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