Spider species richness in cocoa agroforestry systems, comparing vertical strata, local management and distance to forest

Spiders are abundant and diverse in naturally shaded cocoa agroforestry systems and can be economi- cally important predators, but surprisingly little is known on the determinants of spider communities in agroforests. Here, we use data from twelve differently managed cocoa agroforestry systems in Indonesia to investigate the abundance, diversity and composition of spider communities at three spatial scales: (i) stratum, i.e. litter, herb and cocoa canopy layer, (ii) plot-level shade, litter and weed management and (iii) landscape context, i.e. distance to natural forest. Spider communities of all three strata were positively affected by herb cover. High cocoa leaf litter density, which characterised high-intensity management, was accompanied by a decrease in spider abundance and species richness. On a community level, we did not find an effect of forest edge proximity on spider abundance or species richness, but with distance to forest a shift of species dominance in favour of generalists. Our results showed an impact of all three spatial scales, from the microhabitat and local plot management to the landscape context, which changed spider community composition, and suggest a focus beyond plot-level shade management to understand determinants of spider community in cocoa agroforestry systems.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stenchly, K., 58078 Clough, Y., 125731 Tscharntke, T.
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:spa
Subjects:ARANEAE, AGROFORESTERIA, HABITAT, ESPECIES, ESTRATIFICACION, THEOBROMA CACAO,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2011.03.021
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id KOHA-OAI-BVE:148329
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:1483292021-12-10T14:30:38ZSpider species richness in cocoa agroforestry systems, comparing vertical strata, local management and distance to forest Stenchly, K. 58078 Clough, Y. 125731 Tscharntke, T. textspaSpiders are abundant and diverse in naturally shaded cocoa agroforestry systems and can be economi- cally important predators, but surprisingly little is known on the determinants of spider communities in agroforests. Here, we use data from twelve differently managed cocoa agroforestry systems in Indonesia to investigate the abundance, diversity and composition of spider communities at three spatial scales: (i) stratum, i.e. litter, herb and cocoa canopy layer, (ii) plot-level shade, litter and weed management and (iii) landscape context, i.e. distance to natural forest. Spider communities of all three strata were positively affected by herb cover. High cocoa leaf litter density, which characterised high-intensity management, was accompanied by a decrease in spider abundance and species richness. On a community level, we did not find an effect of forest edge proximity on spider abundance or species richness, but with distance to forest a shift of species dominance in favour of generalists. Our results showed an impact of all three spatial scales, from the microhabitat and local plot management to the landscape context, which changed spider community composition, and suggest a focus beyond plot-level shade management to understand determinants of spider community in cocoa agroforestry systems.Spiders are abundant and diverse in naturally shaded cocoa agroforestry systems and can be economi- cally important predators, but surprisingly little is known on the determinants of spider communities in agroforests. Here, we use data from twelve differently managed cocoa agroforestry systems in Indonesia to investigate the abundance, diversity and composition of spider communities at three spatial scales: (i) stratum, i.e. litter, herb and cocoa canopy layer, (ii) plot-level shade, litter and weed management and (iii) landscape context, i.e. distance to natural forest. Spider communities of all three strata were positively affected by herb cover. High cocoa leaf litter density, which characterised high-intensity management, was accompanied by a decrease in spider abundance and species richness. On a community level, we did not find an effect of forest edge proximity on spider abundance or species richness, but with distance to forest a shift of species dominance in favour of generalists. Our results showed an impact of all three spatial scales, from the microhabitat and local plot management to the landscape context, which changed spider community composition, and suggest a focus beyond plot-level shade management to understand determinants of spider community in cocoa agroforestry systems.ARANEAEAGROFORESTERIAHABITATESPECIESESTRATIFICACIONTHEOBROMA CACAOAgriculture, Ecosystems and Environmenthttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2011.03.021
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
language spa
topic ARANEAE
AGROFORESTERIA
HABITAT
ESPECIES
ESTRATIFICACION
THEOBROMA CACAO
ARANEAE
AGROFORESTERIA
HABITAT
ESPECIES
ESTRATIFICACION
THEOBROMA CACAO
spellingShingle ARANEAE
AGROFORESTERIA
HABITAT
ESPECIES
ESTRATIFICACION
THEOBROMA CACAO
ARANEAE
AGROFORESTERIA
HABITAT
ESPECIES
ESTRATIFICACION
THEOBROMA CACAO
Stenchly, K.
58078 Clough, Y.
125731 Tscharntke, T.
Spider species richness in cocoa agroforestry systems, comparing vertical strata, local management and distance to forest
description Spiders are abundant and diverse in naturally shaded cocoa agroforestry systems and can be economi- cally important predators, but surprisingly little is known on the determinants of spider communities in agroforests. Here, we use data from twelve differently managed cocoa agroforestry systems in Indonesia to investigate the abundance, diversity and composition of spider communities at three spatial scales: (i) stratum, i.e. litter, herb and cocoa canopy layer, (ii) plot-level shade, litter and weed management and (iii) landscape context, i.e. distance to natural forest. Spider communities of all three strata were positively affected by herb cover. High cocoa leaf litter density, which characterised high-intensity management, was accompanied by a decrease in spider abundance and species richness. On a community level, we did not find an effect of forest edge proximity on spider abundance or species richness, but with distance to forest a shift of species dominance in favour of generalists. Our results showed an impact of all three spatial scales, from the microhabitat and local plot management to the landscape context, which changed spider community composition, and suggest a focus beyond plot-level shade management to understand determinants of spider community in cocoa agroforestry systems.
format Texto
topic_facet ARANEAE
AGROFORESTERIA
HABITAT
ESPECIES
ESTRATIFICACION
THEOBROMA CACAO
author Stenchly, K.
58078 Clough, Y.
125731 Tscharntke, T.
author_facet Stenchly, K.
58078 Clough, Y.
125731 Tscharntke, T.
author_sort Stenchly, K.
title Spider species richness in cocoa agroforestry systems, comparing vertical strata, local management and distance to forest
title_short Spider species richness in cocoa agroforestry systems, comparing vertical strata, local management and distance to forest
title_full Spider species richness in cocoa agroforestry systems, comparing vertical strata, local management and distance to forest
title_fullStr Spider species richness in cocoa agroforestry systems, comparing vertical strata, local management and distance to forest
title_full_unstemmed Spider species richness in cocoa agroforestry systems, comparing vertical strata, local management and distance to forest
title_sort spider species richness in cocoa agroforestry systems, comparing vertical strata, local management and distance to forest
url https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2011.03.021
work_keys_str_mv AT stenchlyk spiderspeciesrichnessincocoaagroforestrysystemscomparingverticalstratalocalmanagementanddistancetoforest
AT 58078cloughy spiderspeciesrichnessincocoaagroforestrysystemscomparingverticalstratalocalmanagementanddistancetoforest
AT 125731tscharntket spiderspeciesrichnessincocoaagroforestrysystemscomparingverticalstratalocalmanagementanddistancetoforest
_version_ 1756067825529651201