Published on 01 January 2020
Ground-dwelling spiders in agroecosystems of the Dry Chaco: a rapid assessment of community shifts in response to land use changes
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Deforestation and land-cover changes have transformed the Argentinian Dry Chaco into a mosaic dominated by crops and ranch fields. Although land-use activities are seen as one of the major driving forces of biodiversity loss, the specific impacts in this ecoregion are poorly understood. In this study, we analyse the effects of land uses and management on ground-dwelling spiders in agroecosystems of the Dry Chaco, in the North of Argentina. We identified four land-use classes: secondary forests, pastures, orchards, and crops. Additionally, 15 environmental variables were recorded within these land-use classes. Management, tree cover and species richness of trees, shrubs and herbs were the most important variables determining spider community composition. Three families, lycosids (Lycosidae), thomisids (Thomisidae), and zodariids (Zodariidae), were associated as taxonomic indicators as well as functional indicators of the different groups of land uses; thus suggesting that functional traits of ground-dwelling spiders reflect habitat changes within the agricultural landscape they inhabit.
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Publication Details
Subfield
Insect Science
Field
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Domain
Life Sciences
Confidence Score
57%
Source
Scholar Data Model