A forest pool as a habitat island for mites in a limestone forest in Southern Norway

Forest water bodies, e.g., pools, constitute ‘environmental islands’ within forests, with specific flora and fauna thus contributing considerably to the landscape biodiversity. The mite communities of Oribatida and Mesostigmata in two distinctive microhabitats, water-soaked Sphagnum mosses at the ed...

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Main Authors: Seniczak, Anna, Seniczak, Stanislaw, Graczyk, Radomir, Kaczmarek, Sławomir, Jordal, Bjarte H., Kowalski, Jarosław, Djursvoll, Per, Roth, Steffen, Bolger, Thomas
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqw
http://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqw
id ftdatacite:10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqw
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqw 2023-05-15T16:12:21+02:00 A forest pool as a habitat island for mites in a limestone forest in Southern Norway Seniczak, Anna Seniczak, Stanislaw Graczyk, Radomir Kaczmarek, Sławomir Jordal, Bjarte H. Kowalski, Jarosław Djursvoll, Per Roth, Steffen Bolger, Thomas 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqw http://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqw en eng Dryad Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 CC0 FOS Natural sciences dataset Dataset 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqw 2022-02-08T13:50:45Z Forest water bodies, e.g., pools, constitute ‘environmental islands’ within forests, with specific flora and fauna thus contributing considerably to the landscape biodiversity. The mite communities of Oribatida and Mesostigmata in two distinctive microhabitats, water-soaked Sphagnum mosses at the edge of a pool and other mosses growing on the medium-wet forest floor nearby, were compared in a limestone forest in Southern Norway. In total, 16,189 specimens of Oribatida representing 98 species, and 499 specimens of Mesostigmata, from 23 species, were found. The abundance and species number of Oribatida were significantly lower at the pool, while the abundance and species richness of Mesostigmata did not differ. Both the communities of Oribatida and of Mesostigmata differed among the microhabitats studied and analysis showed significant differences between the community structures in the two microhabitats. The most abundant oribatid species in Sphagnum mosses was Parachipteria fanzagoi (Jacot, 1929), which made up over 30% of all Oribatida, followed by Atropacarus striculus (Koch, 1835) and Tyrphonothrus maior (Berlese, 1910) (14% and 12% of Oribatida, respectively). Among Mesostigmata Paragamasus parrunciger (Bhattacharyya, 1963) dominated (44% of Mesostigmata), followed by P. lapponicus (Trägårdh, 1910) (14% of Mesostigmata). Most of these species, except P. lapponicus, were either absent or very uncommon in the other microhabitat studied. The specific acarofauna of the forest pool shows the importance of such microhabitats in increasing forest diversity. In addition, a quarter of the mite species found had not been reported from Norwegian broadleaf forests before, including five new species records for Norway and four new to Fennoscandia, all found in the medium-wet microhabitat. Most of these species are rarely collected and have their northernmost occurrence in the studied forest. : In total, 11 samples, each with a volume of 500 cm3 (ca 100 cm2 in area and 5 cm deep), were collected by hand on 12 June 2017 from two types of forest microhabitat (Figure 2), (A) water-soaked Sphagnum mosses at the edge of a pool (five samples) and, (B) other mosses growing on the medium-wet forest floor nearby (six samples). Mites were extracted using modified Tullgren funnels for 14 days into 90% ethanol and sorted out from the samples under stereomicroscope. Oribatida were mounted on cavity slides in 90% lactic acid (AnalaR NORMAPUR, VWR Chemicals, Belgium) and adult specimens were identified using the keys [15–18], while juveniles were identified based on other publications. Mesostigmata were mounted on permanent slides in PVA mounting medium (lactic acid, poly vinyl acetate and phenol solution, BioQuip Products, Inc., Compton, CA, USA) and identified following publications. Dataset Fennoscandia Mite DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Norway
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic FOS Natural sciences
spellingShingle FOS Natural sciences
Seniczak, Anna
Seniczak, Stanislaw
Graczyk, Radomir
Kaczmarek, Sławomir
Jordal, Bjarte H.
Kowalski, Jarosław
Djursvoll, Per
Roth, Steffen
Bolger, Thomas
A forest pool as a habitat island for mites in a limestone forest in Southern Norway
topic_facet FOS Natural sciences
description Forest water bodies, e.g., pools, constitute ‘environmental islands’ within forests, with specific flora and fauna thus contributing considerably to the landscape biodiversity. The mite communities of Oribatida and Mesostigmata in two distinctive microhabitats, water-soaked Sphagnum mosses at the edge of a pool and other mosses growing on the medium-wet forest floor nearby, were compared in a limestone forest in Southern Norway. In total, 16,189 specimens of Oribatida representing 98 species, and 499 specimens of Mesostigmata, from 23 species, were found. The abundance and species number of Oribatida were significantly lower at the pool, while the abundance and species richness of Mesostigmata did not differ. Both the communities of Oribatida and of Mesostigmata differed among the microhabitats studied and analysis showed significant differences between the community structures in the two microhabitats. The most abundant oribatid species in Sphagnum mosses was Parachipteria fanzagoi (Jacot, 1929), which made up over 30% of all Oribatida, followed by Atropacarus striculus (Koch, 1835) and Tyrphonothrus maior (Berlese, 1910) (14% and 12% of Oribatida, respectively). Among Mesostigmata Paragamasus parrunciger (Bhattacharyya, 1963) dominated (44% of Mesostigmata), followed by P. lapponicus (Trägårdh, 1910) (14% of Mesostigmata). Most of these species, except P. lapponicus, were either absent or very uncommon in the other microhabitat studied. The specific acarofauna of the forest pool shows the importance of such microhabitats in increasing forest diversity. In addition, a quarter of the mite species found had not been reported from Norwegian broadleaf forests before, including five new species records for Norway and four new to Fennoscandia, all found in the medium-wet microhabitat. Most of these species are rarely collected and have their northernmost occurrence in the studied forest. : In total, 11 samples, each with a volume of 500 cm3 (ca 100 cm2 in area and 5 cm deep), were collected by hand on 12 June 2017 from two types of forest microhabitat (Figure 2), (A) water-soaked Sphagnum mosses at the edge of a pool (five samples) and, (B) other mosses growing on the medium-wet forest floor nearby (six samples). Mites were extracted using modified Tullgren funnels for 14 days into 90% ethanol and sorted out from the samples under stereomicroscope. Oribatida were mounted on cavity slides in 90% lactic acid (AnalaR NORMAPUR, VWR Chemicals, Belgium) and adult specimens were identified using the keys [15–18], while juveniles were identified based on other publications. Mesostigmata were mounted on permanent slides in PVA mounting medium (lactic acid, poly vinyl acetate and phenol solution, BioQuip Products, Inc., Compton, CA, USA) and identified following publications.
format Dataset
author Seniczak, Anna
Seniczak, Stanislaw
Graczyk, Radomir
Kaczmarek, Sławomir
Jordal, Bjarte H.
Kowalski, Jarosław
Djursvoll, Per
Roth, Steffen
Bolger, Thomas
author_facet Seniczak, Anna
Seniczak, Stanislaw
Graczyk, Radomir
Kaczmarek, Sławomir
Jordal, Bjarte H.
Kowalski, Jarosław
Djursvoll, Per
Roth, Steffen
Bolger, Thomas
author_sort Seniczak, Anna
title A forest pool as a habitat island for mites in a limestone forest in Southern Norway
title_short A forest pool as a habitat island for mites in a limestone forest in Southern Norway
title_full A forest pool as a habitat island for mites in a limestone forest in Southern Norway
title_fullStr A forest pool as a habitat island for mites in a limestone forest in Southern Norway
title_full_unstemmed A forest pool as a habitat island for mites in a limestone forest in Southern Norway
title_sort forest pool as a habitat island for mites in a limestone forest in southern norway
publisher Dryad
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqw
http://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqw
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Fennoscandia
Mite
genre_facet Fennoscandia
Mite
op_rights Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
cc0-1.0
op_rightsnorm CC0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqw
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