Site-specific length-biomass relationships of arctic arthropod families are critical for accurate ecological inferences ...

Arthropods play an essential role in terrestrial ecosystems, not least by forming the food base for insectivorous birds. To better understand such trophic interactions, it is essential to monitor seasonal trajectories in arthropod biomass. Because obtaining direct measurements of the body mass of in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Versluijs, Tom Sebastiaan Laurens, Zhemchuzhnikov, Mikhail, Kutcherov, Dmitry, Roslin, Tomas, Martin Schmidt, Niels, van Gils, Jan, Reneerkens, Jeroen
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2023
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7779504
https://zenodo.org/record/7779504
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Summary:Arthropods play an essential role in terrestrial ecosystems, not least by forming the food base for insectivorous birds. To better understand such trophic interactions, it is essential to monitor seasonal trajectories in arthropod biomass. Because obtaining direct measurements of the body mass of individual specimens is laborious, these data are often indirectly acquired by utilizing allometric length-biomass relationships based on a correlative parameter, such as body length. Studies on insectivorous birds have often used such relationships with a low taxonomic resolution and/or small sample size and/or adopted regressions calibrated in different biomes. Despite the scientific interest in the ecology of arctic arthropods, no site-specific family-level length-biomass relationships have hitherto been published. Here we present 27 family-specific length-biomass relationships from two sites in the High Arctic: Zackenberg in northeast Greenland and Knipovich in north Taimyr, Russia. We show that length-biomass ...