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Spider predation on forest-floor Collembola and evidence for indirect effects on decomposition
Authors:Kendra L Lawrence  David H Wise
Institution:Department of Entomology, University of Kentucky, S-225 Agricultural Science Bldg.-North, Lexington, KY 40546-0091 USA
Abstract:Spiders are major predators in forest-floor leaf litter, yet little is known about their impact on prey populations and on forest-floor processes such as litter decomposition. This experiment investigated the effect of removing spiders on Collembola densities. We also examined the potential indirect effect of spider removal on rate of litter disappearance. Twenty-eight 1-m2 plots were randomly assigned to one of four treatments: O – open, no manipulations; F – fenced, no litter sifted, no spiders removed; FS – fenced, litter sifted, no spiders removed; and FSR – fenced, litter sifted, spiders removed. In early August, we sifted the litter in the FS and FSR plots, removing all encountered spiders from the FSR treatment. A month later, we placed into each plot one 15 × 15-cm litterbag filled with a known amount (ca. 3 g) of dried straw. After six weeks, litterbags were collected and fauna were extracted in a Kempson-McFadyen apparatus. Decreasing spider predation increased densities of Collembola, and increased the rate at which straw disappeared from litterbags. These results indicate that spider predation may reduce Collembola densities enough to lower rates of litter disappearance on the forest floor.
Keywords:Decomposition  litterbag experiment  Collembola  spiders  forest-floor  leaf litter
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