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Management intensity and vegetation complexity affect web-building spiders and their prey

Diehl, Eva ; Mader, Viktoria L. ; Wolters, Volkmar and Birkhofer, Klaus LU (2013) In Oecologia 173(2). p.579-589
Abstract
Agricultural management and vegetation complexity affect arthropod diversity and may alter trophic interactions between predators and their prey. Web-building spiders are abundant generalist predators and important natural enemies of pests. We analyzed how management intensity (tillage, cutting of the vegetation, grazing by cattle, and synthetic and organic inputs) and vegetation complexity (plant species richness, vegetation height, coverage, and density) affect rarefied richness and composition of web-building spiders and their prey with respect to prey availability and aphid predation in 12 habitats, ranging from an uncut fallow to a conventionally managed maize field. Spiders and prey from webs were collected manually and the potential... (More)
Agricultural management and vegetation complexity affect arthropod diversity and may alter trophic interactions between predators and their prey. Web-building spiders are abundant generalist predators and important natural enemies of pests. We analyzed how management intensity (tillage, cutting of the vegetation, grazing by cattle, and synthetic and organic inputs) and vegetation complexity (plant species richness, vegetation height, coverage, and density) affect rarefied richness and composition of web-building spiders and their prey with respect to prey availability and aphid predation in 12 habitats, ranging from an uncut fallow to a conventionally managed maize field. Spiders and prey from webs were collected manually and the potential prey were quantified using sticky traps. The species richness of web-building spiders and the order richness of prey increased with plant diversity and vegetation coverage. Prey order richness was lower at tilled compared to no-till sites. Hemipterans (primarily aphids) were overrepresented, while dipterans, hymenopterans, and thysanopterans were underrepresented in webs compared to sticky traps. The per spider capture efficiency for aphids was higher at tilled than at no-till sites and decreased with vegetation complexity. After accounting for local densities, 1.8 times more aphids were captured at uncut compared to cut sites. Our results emphasize the functional role of web-building spiders in aphid predation, but suggest negative effects of cutting or harvesting. We conclude that reduced management intensity and increased vegetation complexity help to conserve local invertebrate diversity, and that web-building spiders at sites under low management intensity (e.g., semi-natural habitats) contribute to aphid suppression at the landscape scale. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Aphid predation, Diet composition, Plant species richness, Predator-prey, interactions, Vegetation structure
in
Oecologia
volume
173
issue
2
pages
579 - 589
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • wos:000325028500023
  • scopus:84884812583
  • pmid:23494286
ISSN
1432-1939
DOI
10.1007/s00442-013-2634-7
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
5c37baae-536b-4c04-ab0c-ae50ab2201cb (old id 4172524)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 13:38:36
date last changed
2022-03-14 01:09:22
@article{5c37baae-536b-4c04-ab0c-ae50ab2201cb,
  abstract     = {{Agricultural management and vegetation complexity affect arthropod diversity and may alter trophic interactions between predators and their prey. Web-building spiders are abundant generalist predators and important natural enemies of pests. We analyzed how management intensity (tillage, cutting of the vegetation, grazing by cattle, and synthetic and organic inputs) and vegetation complexity (plant species richness, vegetation height, coverage, and density) affect rarefied richness and composition of web-building spiders and their prey with respect to prey availability and aphid predation in 12 habitats, ranging from an uncut fallow to a conventionally managed maize field. Spiders and prey from webs were collected manually and the potential prey were quantified using sticky traps. The species richness of web-building spiders and the order richness of prey increased with plant diversity and vegetation coverage. Prey order richness was lower at tilled compared to no-till sites. Hemipterans (primarily aphids) were overrepresented, while dipterans, hymenopterans, and thysanopterans were underrepresented in webs compared to sticky traps. The per spider capture efficiency for aphids was higher at tilled than at no-till sites and decreased with vegetation complexity. After accounting for local densities, 1.8 times more aphids were captured at uncut compared to cut sites. Our results emphasize the functional role of web-building spiders in aphid predation, but suggest negative effects of cutting or harvesting. We conclude that reduced management intensity and increased vegetation complexity help to conserve local invertebrate diversity, and that web-building spiders at sites under low management intensity (e.g., semi-natural habitats) contribute to aphid suppression at the landscape scale.}},
  author       = {{Diehl, Eva and Mader, Viktoria L. and Wolters, Volkmar and Birkhofer, Klaus}},
  issn         = {{1432-1939}},
  keywords     = {{Aphid predation; Diet composition; Plant species richness; Predator-prey; interactions; Vegetation structure}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{579--589}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Oecologia}},
  title        = {{Management intensity and vegetation complexity affect web-building spiders and their prey}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-013-2634-7}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s00442-013-2634-7}},
  volume       = {{173}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}