Biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of Azores

Copyright © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2006. The loss of biotic integrity in ecosystems due to human pressure has been receiving much attention from the scientific community. The primary aim of this study is to understand how the increasing human pressure on natural forests in the Azorean...

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Published in:Biodiversity and Conservation
Main Authors: Cardoso, Pedro, Borges, Paulo A. V., Gaspar, Clara
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer 2007
Subjects:
IBI
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/1399
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spelling ftunivacores:oai:repositorio.uac.pt:10400.3/1399 2023-05-15T17:36:35+02:00 Biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of Azores Cardoso, Pedro Borges, Paulo A. V. Gaspar, Clara 2007 http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/1399 eng eng Springer http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10531-006-9078-x Cardoso, P.; Borges, P.A.V.; Gaspar, C. Biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of Azores, "BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION", 16(10), 2883-2901, 2007. 0960-3115 (Print) 1572-9710 (Online) http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/1399 openAccess Disturbance Endemic Species IBI Invasive Species Island Ecosystems Macaronesia Metrics Multimetric Index Naturalness Scalability article 2007 ftunivacores https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-006-9078-x 2022-05-01T14:30:24Z Copyright © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2006. The loss of biotic integrity in ecosystems due to human pressure has been receiving much attention from the scientific community. The primary aim of this study is to understand how the increasing human pressure on natural forests in the Azorean archipelago (North Atlantic) is affecting their epigean arthropod communities and which biological parameters it affects most. An expert team did fieldwork covering most of the natural forests (mainly inside nature reserves) of the archipelago using standardized pitfall trapping. To build a multimetric index we tested a number of taxonomic and ecological parameters that can potentially be influenced by disturbance. Sixteen of these were found to be significantly influenced by disturbance in forests. We retained seven metrics due to both, desirable scalability properties and relatively low correlation between them. These included the percentages of endemic and predator species richness and also predator abundance, which are inversely related to disturbance; and the percentages of native and saprophagous species richness and introduced and herbivore abundance, which are positively related to disturbance. All seven metrics were combined in an Index of Biotic Integrity (IBI) value. We then proceeded to understand which potential disturbance factors are influencing the biotic integrity of communities and how such influence is felt. Five disturbance factors were found to influence the IBI, although in different ways: the size and fragmentation of reserves, the distance of sites to the reserve borders, the invasion by alien plants and the density of human paths at the sites. Given that only percentages of taxonomical or ecological characteristics were chosen as metrics, we tested and found the scalability of the IBI to be possible, allowing the comparison of sites with different collecting effort or even the comparison of reserves with different areas and numbers of collecting sites in each. Finally, we propose a novel graphical representation for multimetric indices like the IBI, one which allows retaining much of the information that is usually lost in multimetric indices. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Repositório da Universidade dos Açores Biodiversity and Conservation 16 10 2883 2901
institution Open Polar
collection Repositório da Universidade dos Açores
op_collection_id ftunivacores
language English
topic Disturbance
Endemic Species
IBI
Invasive Species
Island Ecosystems
Macaronesia
Metrics
Multimetric Index
Naturalness
Scalability
spellingShingle Disturbance
Endemic Species
IBI
Invasive Species
Island Ecosystems
Macaronesia
Metrics
Multimetric Index
Naturalness
Scalability
Cardoso, Pedro
Borges, Paulo A. V.
Gaspar, Clara
Biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of Azores
topic_facet Disturbance
Endemic Species
IBI
Invasive Species
Island Ecosystems
Macaronesia
Metrics
Multimetric Index
Naturalness
Scalability
description Copyright © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2006. The loss of biotic integrity in ecosystems due to human pressure has been receiving much attention from the scientific community. The primary aim of this study is to understand how the increasing human pressure on natural forests in the Azorean archipelago (North Atlantic) is affecting their epigean arthropod communities and which biological parameters it affects most. An expert team did fieldwork covering most of the natural forests (mainly inside nature reserves) of the archipelago using standardized pitfall trapping. To build a multimetric index we tested a number of taxonomic and ecological parameters that can potentially be influenced by disturbance. Sixteen of these were found to be significantly influenced by disturbance in forests. We retained seven metrics due to both, desirable scalability properties and relatively low correlation between them. These included the percentages of endemic and predator species richness and also predator abundance, which are inversely related to disturbance; and the percentages of native and saprophagous species richness and introduced and herbivore abundance, which are positively related to disturbance. All seven metrics were combined in an Index of Biotic Integrity (IBI) value. We then proceeded to understand which potential disturbance factors are influencing the biotic integrity of communities and how such influence is felt. Five disturbance factors were found to influence the IBI, although in different ways: the size and fragmentation of reserves, the distance of sites to the reserve borders, the invasion by alien plants and the density of human paths at the sites. Given that only percentages of taxonomical or ecological characteristics were chosen as metrics, we tested and found the scalability of the IBI to be possible, allowing the comparison of sites with different collecting effort or even the comparison of reserves with different areas and numbers of collecting sites in each. Finally, we propose a novel graphical representation for multimetric indices like the IBI, one which allows retaining much of the information that is usually lost in multimetric indices.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cardoso, Pedro
Borges, Paulo A. V.
Gaspar, Clara
author_facet Cardoso, Pedro
Borges, Paulo A. V.
Gaspar, Clara
author_sort Cardoso, Pedro
title Biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of Azores
title_short Biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of Azores
title_full Biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of Azores
title_fullStr Biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of Azores
title_full_unstemmed Biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of Azores
title_sort biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of azores
publisher Springer
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/1399
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10531-006-9078-x
Cardoso, P.; Borges, P.A.V.; Gaspar, C. Biotic integrity of the arthropod communities in the natural forests of Azores, "BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION", 16(10), 2883-2901, 2007.
0960-3115 (Print)
1572-9710 (Online)
http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/1399
op_rights openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-006-9078-x
container_title Biodiversity and Conservation
container_volume 16
container_issue 10
container_start_page 2883
op_container_end_page 2901
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