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Arthropod communities on understory plants in thinned and unthinned Douglas-fir forests in the Oregon Coast Range

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Arthropod communities on understory plants in thinned and unthinned Douglas-fir forests in the Oregon Coast Range
Names Doolittle, Alyssa M. (creator)
Schowalter, Timothy D. (advisor)
Date Issued 2000-05-05 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2001
Abstract This study assessed the effects of thinning on arthropod communities on
understory plants in the Central Oregon Coast Range. Arthropods were sampled
from five understory plants in five pairs of thinned and unthinned, young (50-80
yrs), managed Douglas-fir stands, from late May to mid-July of 1998. Vine maple
(Acer circinatum), salal (Gaultheria shallon), understory hemlock (Tsuga
heterophylla), bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum), and sword fern (Polystichum
munitum) were sampled for arthropods using beating sheet and aspirators.
Arthropod taxa were sorted and identified to family, species where possible.
Intensities and diversity indices were calculated both for all arthropods (including
spider taxa) and for spiders separately. Arthropods were placed into functional
groups based on trophic level/feeding habits. Spiders were placed in guilds based
on prey capture strategies.
Collembolans, psocopterans, aphids and linyphiid spiders together made up
50% of total arthropod abundance. Spiders made up 23% of the total arthropod
abundance. Functional groups overall were not found in different intensities
between thinned and unthinned stands. Relative representation of spider guilds was different between thinned and unthinned stands. Cobweb weavers and nocturnal
hunters had higher intensities in thinned stands. Sheetweb weavers, orbweb
weavers and agile hunters had higher intensities in unthinned stands. Sap-suckers
on vine maple were more abundant in unthinned stands. Parasitoids on vine maple
were more abundant in thinned stands. Agile hunters on salal were more abundant
in unthinned stands. Salal, especially in unthinned stands, provided important
structure for spider communities. Salal supported high spider diversity. Hemlock
had the highest species richness, for both arthropod and spider communities.
Communities on vine maple were diverse, despite low overall arthropod
abundance.
The arthropod communities showed significant segregation by plant species
and treatment condition. Shrub cover, shrub diversity, patch size, light levels, tree
density and stand age explained arthropod community differences. Each one of the
understory plants I studied supported a unique portion of the overall understory
arthropod community and should be maintained in managed forests to support this
important element of diversity. Differences in species distribution and structure of
understory vegetation between treatments, resulting in arthropod community
differences, suggests that maintenance of both treatment conditions across a
landscape is important for maintaining diversity of understory arthropod
communities.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Arthropod populations -- Oregon
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/13543

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