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Relationship between plant and butterfly community composition on upland prairies of the Willamette Valley, Oregon

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Title Relationship between plant and butterfly community composition on upland prairies of the Willamette Valley, Oregon
Names York, Melissa M. (creator)
Rosenberg, Daniel K. (advisor)
Date Issued 2002-11-01 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2003
Abstract Small remnants of 'natural' habitats exist today throughout much of the world. Upland
prairies in the Willamette Valley, Oregon have been nearly eliminated by conversion to
agriculture and other uses. As a result, very few prairies remain and at least four butterfly
species that require this habitat appear to be locally uncommon. To better understand
requirements for conservation and management of upland prairies and the species that
depend on them, I investigated plant abundance and species richness, butterfly abundance
and species richness, and prairie integrity on 17 prairie remnants. To evaluate the
relationship between prairie integrity and butterfly community composition, integrity was
defined by abundance and species richness of native, prairie plant species. Because little
is known about the habitat requirements of prairie-dwelling organisms, I also investigated
juvenile and adult food resource use and spatial patterns associated with resource use by
four locally uncommon butterfly species: common checkered-skipper, Fender's blue, Anise
swallowtail, and field crescent. Plant species used and not used for nectaring and
oviposition and spatial relationships between the two were explored for each butterfly
species. My study provides evidence that remnants, including small, degraded sites, serve
as refuges for locally uncommon butterfly species. The greatest mean number of butterfly
species was detected on sites of high integrity, but total butterfly abundance at all but one unique site was similar to that of low and medium integrity sites. Butterfly species
richness appeared to be positively associated with remnant integrity while factors other
than remnant integrity as defined here may be influential on butterfly abundance.
Furthermore, I suggest that the locally uncommon butterflies studied here have specific
habitat requirements and this likely contributed to their sparse distribution. Although host
plant abundance did not appear to limit butterfly distributions within either site, I lacked
sufficient sample sizes necessary to make strong inferences. Factors other than, or in
combination, with host plant occurrence, such as presence of Composite nectar species and
native plant abundance, may be important in determining their distribution within a site.
Lack of large areas of habitat and incidence of uncommon species on remnants makes it
imperative that we conserve biodiversity by the maintenance, improvement, and protection
of some very small areas.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Insect-plant relationships -- Oregon -- Willamette River Valley
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/20463

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