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1.
Bourassa S  Spence JR  Hartley DJ  Lee SI 《ZooKeys》2011,(147):545-558
A study spanning ten years revealed changes in wing-morph ratios corroborating the hypothesis that the wing-dimorphic introduced carabid, Pterostichus melanarius Ill.,is spreading through flight, from the city of Edmonton, Canada and establishing populations in natural aspen forest of more rural areas 45-50 km to the East. Comparison of wing-morph ratios between Pterostichus melanarius and the native wing dimorphic species Agonum retractum LeConte suggests that the spatial variation in ratios for Pterostichus melanarius does not reflect underlying environmental variation, but instead the action of selective forces on this wing-dimorphic species. About ten years after its earliest detection in some rural sites the frequency of macropterous individuals in Pterostichus melanarius has decreased c. five-fold, but it is still above the level seen in European populations in which the two wing-morphs are thought to exist in equilibrium. Pterostichus melanarius is expanding its range in native aspen forest much faster than three other introduced species Clivina fossor L.), Carabus granulatus O.F. Müllerand Clivina fossor L also encountered in this study. The two Carabus species are flightless, but Carabus fossor can be dimorphic. Although these four non-native ground beetle species comprise >85% of the carabids collected at sites in urban Edmonton, activity-density of native carabids was similar across the urban-rural gradient, suggesting little direct impact of introduced species on the local abundance of native species. In a second study conducted at a smaller scale near George Lake, Alberta, macropterous individuals of Pterostichus melanarius have penetrated furthest and most rapidly into native aspen forest. Furthermore, the percentage of micropterous individuals has increased markedly in areas first colonized a decade previously. Overall, these studies support the idea that macropterous beetles in wing-d dimorphic species are important vanguards for early colonization of unexploited territory, but that flightless individuals replace the flying morph relatively rapidly once populations are established.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract:  Carabid beetles were sampled by pitfall traps in May–September 2002 and 2003 in an experimental organic strawberry field in seven different mulching row treatments and in fescue-growing row spaces to determine the effect of mulches on carabid activity–density and species composition. There were no differences between treatments or row spaces in total numbers of all carabid species in either season. Of the 67 identified species and 4374 individuals, the most trapped ones were Clivina fossor (11.7% of total catch), Dyschirius globosus (10.2%), Patrobus atrorufus (9.3%), Pterostichus niger (8.8%), Bembidion properans (7.4%), Pterostichus melanarius (6.0%), Bembidion lampros (5.7%), Pterostichus crenatus (5.7%), Amara communis (4.1%), Trechus secalis (3.9%), Pterostichus strenuus (3.9%), Loricera pilicornis (3.1%), Harpalus rufipes (2.8%) and Carabus nemoralis (2.6%). Large carabid species P. niger and P. melanarius were trapped more in all mulched rows than in row spaces, and C. nemoralis was trapped more in the mixture of pine woodchip/buckwheat husk mulch than in row spaces, barley straw and birch woodchip mulch. The small but abundant species P. atrorufus was trapped more in buckwheat husk mulch than in row spaces and B. properans in row spaces than in buckwheat husk mulch. H. rufipes , being also a pest in strawberry, was trapped more in cut grass mulch than in row spaces. The Shannon H' diversity index was significantly higher in the mixture of pine woodchip/buckwheat husk mulch than in black plastic, buckwheat husk mulch or in row spaces, and in birch woodchip and cut grass mulches than in row spaces. The results of trapping studies show the species preference to the specific mulches, and reflect positive or negative effect of mulches on carabid diversity with consequences to plant protection.  相似文献   

3.
Diversity and abundance of ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) can be enhanced in vegetable and field intercropping systems, but the complexity of polycultures precludes the application of generalized assumptions of effects for novel intercropping combinations. In a field experiment conducted at Lacombe and Ellerslie, Alberta, Canada, in 2005 and 2006, we investigated the effects of intercropping canola (Brassica napus L.) with wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) on the diversity and community structure of carabid beetles, and on the activity density responses of individual carabid species. Shannon-Wiener diversity index scores and species evenness increased significantly as the proportion of wheat comprising total crop plant populations increased in one site-year of the study, indicating a positive response to enhanced crop plant species evenness in the intercrops, and in that same site-year, ground beetle communities in intercrops shifted to more closely approximate those in wheat monocultures as the percentage of wheat in the intercrops increased. Individual carabid species activity densities showed differing responses to intercropping, although activity densities of some potential root maggot (Delia spp.) (Diptera: Anthomyiidae) predators were greater in intercrops with high proportions of wheat than in canola monocultures. The activity density of Pterostichus melanarius (Illiger), the most abundant species collected, tended to be greater in canola monocultures than high-wheat intercrops or wheat monocultures. We conclude that intercrops of canola and wheat have the potential to enhance populations of some carabid species, therefore possibly exerting increased pressure on some canola insect pests.  相似文献   

4.
We pitfall-trapped carabid beetles across an urban-rural gradient in central Alberta, Canada to assess the relative contributions of landscape structure and habitat quality in explaining variation in composition of assemblages. The gradient ranged from the "urban" zone in the city of Edmonton, through a "suburban" zone just outside the city, into a "rural" zone 25–60 km east of the city. We trapped beetles at three replicated sites for each of two habitats (unmanaged grasslands and highly managed graveyards) in each of the three zones. Most of the 24 species (3162 individuals) captured were commonly associated with open habitats. Pterostichus melanarius , an introduced species, made up 80% of the total catch. Carabid assemblages of grasslands and graveyards were distinct, with lower species richness and lower catch rates of native, introduced and brachypterous carabids in graveyards. Graveyard assemblages also had proportionally fewer brachypterous carabid individuals (32 vs 52%) and species (20 vs 36%), suggesting that populations recruit locally from elsewhere after disturbances. Native carabids were least abundant in the urban areas. Brachypterous carabids were similarly abundant across the gradient, but more occurred in the urban zone than elsewhere (32 vs 5–10%). Samples from graveyards were characterized by lower beta diversity (variation among samples) than those from grasslands, but beta diversity was more-or-less equally variable across the gradient within habitats. The amount of unmanaged grassland habitat and the degree of urbanization significantly influence carabid assemblages, and therefore are relevant to management and conservation of urban grassland areas.  相似文献   

5.
Carabid beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) were collected by using pitfall traps in 68 sites on the Åland Islands, SW Finland The sites were divided into four environmental types 1) cultivated fields and grazed pastures. 2) recently abandoned fields, 3) abandoned, overgrown cultivations, and 4) forests A total of 4901 carabids belonging to 77 species were caught Twenty of the most abundant species were classified into four distributional types according to their occurrence among the various environmental types 1) generalists (five species), 2) field species (five species), 3) species of open habitat (seven species), and 4) forest species (three species) Associations with environmental types were strictest among field species and forest species However, most of the species were found in low numbers outside each preferred environmental type The number of species and species diversity was highest in fields and pastures and lowest in forests, which agrees with previously detected patterns on the mainland Finland Pairwise similarity of the carabid assemblages among the environmental types was highest between the two types of abandoned cultivations The spatial distribution of two carabid species, Pterostichus melanarius and P niger , were examined in detail to ascertain whether any interspecific interaction could help explain their different island-mainland distribution observed in previous studies  相似文献   

6.
Abstract: Laboratory experiments were used to determine the feeding preferences of six carabid beetles and one lycosid spider on aphid and collembolan prey. The first investigation used only five species of carabid Pterostichus melanarius Illiger, Pterostichus madidus F., Harpalus rufipes DeGeer, Nebria brevicollis F. and Carabus violaceus L., which had been caught most commonly in pitfall traps in the headland region of arable crop fields. When offered Brevicoryne brassicae L., Sitobion avenae F., Metopolophium dirhodum Walker and Rhopalosiphum padi L. as prey items, the species consistently consumed in high numbers was M. dirhodum . In subsequent experiments four carabids Pterostichus cupreus L., P. melanarius, P. madidus. H. rufipes and a lycosid spider Trochosa ruricola DeGeer whose distribution was shown by pitfall trapping to extend throughout the arable crop, were the chosen predators. These predators were offered a choice between M. dirhodum and entomobryid collembolans (a recognised alternative prey item) to gauge their preference between the two prey types. Both male and female P. cupreus and P. melanarius showed a significant preference for the aphid prey, while there was no significant preference displayed by the other species. The effect of temperature on the voracity of these five predators fed on M. dirhodum was investigated. There were significant differences in the number of aphids consumed by the species and sexes at the different temperatures. Regression analysis on the mean numbers of aphids eaten by each sex of the five predators, showed that in the majority of cases there was a significant increase in predation with increasing temperature. In considering the dietary preferences illustrated by these experiments, it appeared that P. cupreus and P. melanarius offered the greatest potential in controlling aphids on arable crops.  相似文献   

7.
Kwiatkowski A 《ZooKeys》2011,(100):447-459
During a period of three years (2006-2008) the carabid fauna in wet and humid forest habitats of different stages of succession was studied at the Puszcza Knyszynska (north-east part of Poland). The aim of this study was to determine how the assemblages of the carabid fauna change in relation to the ongoing process of succession. Using pitfall traps, 24 plots were sampled. The plots were located in stands of different age, from two year old plantations to more than 100 year old forests. Additionally, the stands were ordered in three moisture classes (wet, humid and very humid) and two classes of soil richness. As indicators for change in the carabid fauna in relation to age of the stands Mean Individual Biomass (MIB), species diversity and share of forest species were used. By applying multivariate statistics the relation of the different habitat characteristics to changes in the carabid fauna was examined. During the study 8903 individuals belonging to 57 species were collected. Pterostichus niger represented 28% of the total catches and therefore the most common species. Another common species, Pterostichus melanarius, contributed to 13% of the total catch. This species was caught at every plot, even in the old forests. In contrast to the results obtained by Szyszko (1990) for fresh and dry pine stands, in this study the relation of MIB with the age of forest was not significant. Although the number of species was rather constant, the number of individuals belonging to the group of forest species significantly increased with the ageing of the forest. The multivariate analysis showed a relationship with ageing of the stands and soil richness rather than with moisture and size of the forest. According to the present paper, clear cuttings in wet and humid habitats do not cause a strong degradation of the carabid fauna.  相似文献   

8.
The impact of predation by the generalist carabid beetle Pterostichus melanarius (Illiger) on populations of the field slug Deroceras reticulatum (Müller), and the effects of prey size on the predator-prey interaction, were measured under semi-field conditions. It was hypothesized that environmental heterogeneity would lead to very different patterns of comparative mortality than might be deduced from size choice experiments conducted in the laboratory. Results from outdoor mini-plots, emulating conditions in a field of wheat, demonstrated that P. melanarius significantly reduced numbers of slugs from all size classes, with no apparent preferences. This was in marked contrast to results from earlier laboratory studies, where this beetle fed preferentially on the smallest slugs. The slugs in the mini-plots ranged in size from 2-100 mg and the numbers in the mini-plot reflected the size frequency distribution in the field. Beetles in mini-plots containing high densities of slugs increased significantly in weight, in contrast to beetles in mini-plots with low slug density or no added slugs, which did not. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA), using anti-slug monoclonal antibodies, showed that where there was a higher density of slugs there was more slug protein in the guts of the beetles. It was concluded that environmental heterogeneity probably provided a greater number and diversity of refugia for smaller than for larger slugs, counteracting laboratory-measured size preferences measured in arenas without refugia. These results have implications for a range of ecological studies involving inter- and intra-specific prey size choice, and emphasize the dangers of extrapolating from the laboratory to the field.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract. 1. The number of common carabid beetles trapped-irr a wheat field on a clay with flint soil from May to October in.1971–77 differed greatly: Harpalus rufipes and Pterostichus melanarius were numerous every year; but the appearance of H.aeneus, P.madidus, Agonum dorsale, Nebria brevicollis, Notiophilus biguttatus, Bembidion lampros and Trechus quadristriatus was much more variable.
2. The numbers caught were not correlated with rainfall. Catches of the large species were positively correlated with accumulated temperature above an assumed activity threshold of 5°C, whereas the smaller beetles were negatively correlated with accumulated temperature, suggesting that the danger of desiccation at high temperatures limits their activity.
3. The egg-laying periods of the commonest species were: B.lampros and A.dorsale from late April to June; overwintered P.melanarius, H.rufipes and H.aeneus in May and June, with the summer generation of these species and of P.madidus from July to September; T.quadristriatus during August and September; N.brevicollis from September to November; N.biguttatus and C.fossor laid in the early summer and again in the autumn.
4. A few male and female H.rufipes and H.aeneus , and one female P.melanarius and N.brevicollis were each parasitized by a single tachinid larva; one P.melanarius was infested with a mermithid parasite.  相似文献   

10.
Field studies suggest that the generalist carabid predator and scavenger Pterostichus melanarius Illiger aggregates to patches with a higher density of slug prey. The mechanisms behind such aggregation are unknown. Experiments were conducted to test the hypothesis that they are responding to chemical cues. Electroantennograms (EAGs) showed no response by P. melanarius antennae to live, nematode-infected, injured or freshly killed slugs, but a strong response to dead slugs that had been allowed to decay for up to 48 h. Such a response would enable the beetles to find carrion in the field and may also, as dead prey are likely to be spatially correlated with live ones, provide a mechanism by which P. melanarius finds patches with a higher density of live slugs. Subsequent video analyses of P. melanarius responses to patches of slug mucus within arenas showed that beetles with intact antennae could detect these patches because they spent more time, and moved greater distances, within them and increased their rate of turning. Thus, at close range, P. melanarius used their antennae to detect slug mucus and hence, by implication, live slugs. The apparent contradiction between EAG data and behavioural experiments is discussed. Together these result confirm that P. melanariusdoes respond to chemical cues from its slug prey in ways that could lead to aggregation in areas of higher slug density in the field.  相似文献   

11.
We studied carabid beetle assemblage structure and species diversity in an intermediate successional stage (seral) forest established in areas affected by the 1888 eruption of Mt. Bandai and a climax forest that had not been affected by the eruption at the Urabandai area, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. In total, 2,131 carabid beetles representing 31 species were collected using pitfall traps without bait. A comparison of carabid beetle assemblages between the two forest types revealed that the number of species observed was comparable, but their abundance was greater in the seral forest. The assemblage structure clearly differed between the two forest types. In the seral forest, forest generalists, such as Synuchus arcuaticollis and Pterostichus prolongatus, along with forest specialists including Carabus vanvolxemi and Pterostichus asymmetricus, were collected. In the climax forest, forest generalists, such as Synuchus cycloderus and Carabus albrechti tsukubanus, were more abundant than forest specialists. This suggests that the current seral forest in the Urabandai area possesses environmental variables that enable the coexistence of both forest specialist and generalist beetle species. A redundancy analysis showed that six species from the genera Synuchus and Pterostichus were associated with high canopy openness and high understory vegetation cover, whereas species recorded only in the climax forest were associated with deep litter. Therefore, it seems likely that carabid beetles in the Urabandai area were affected by these three environmental variables.  相似文献   

12.
1 Studies of the epigeal coleopteran fauna on five pairs of organic and conventional farms were carried out between May and July 1994 in southern England using pitfall trapping. A total of 27 749 individuals and 140 species were identified. Overall, abundance of Coleoptera was greatest on organically managed farms. 2 Ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) and staphylinid beetles (Col. Staphylinidae) formed 79.7% and 16.7%, respectively, of the total catch. Pterostichus melanarius was the dominant carabid among the 45 species captured and significantly higher numbers were found in organic farms. Tachinus signatus was the most common of 44 staphylinid species, and was significantly more abundant on conventional farms. 3 For carabids, the log‐series α diversity index was higher on conventional farms but was not statistically different from that calculated for organic farms. The α index was identical for staphylinid species from organic and conventional farms. Diversity was significantly higher from conventional farms when data were combined for all of the recorded coleopteran species. 4 From this study, it appears that the main effect of farming practice is to influence the overall abundance and dominance of particular species, and the lower diversity of organic farms is a consequence of the large increase in dominance of a single species, namely P. melanarius.  相似文献   

13.
Environment-friendly farming techniques seek to increase invertebrate biodiversity in part with the intention of encouraging greater numbers of predators that will help to control crop pests. However, in theory, this effect may be negated if the availability of a greater abundance and diversity of alternative prey diverts predators away from feeding on pests. The hypothesis that access to alternative prey can lead to reduced pest suppression under semi-field conditions was tested. Alternative prey type and diversity were manipulated in 70 mesocosms over 7+ weeks in the presence of the carabid Pterostichus melanarius (Illiger), a known predator of slugs, and reproducing populations of the slug Deroceras reticulatum (Müller). Significantly fewer slugs survived where no alternative prey were provided. Maximum slug numbers and biomass were found in treatments containing either carabids plus a high diversity of alternative prey (many species of earthworm and three of Diptera larvae) or a single additional prey (blowfly larvae, Calliphora vomitoria Linnaeus). In these treatments slug numbers and biomass were as high as in plots lacking predators. The effects of alternative prey were taxon-specific. Alternative prey strongly affected carabid fitness in terms of biomass and egg load. The fittest predators (those with access to high alternative prey diversity or C. vomitoria larvae) reduced slug numbers the least. The mean individual slug weights were greater in treatments with alternative prey than where no alternative prey were provided to the carabids. These results suggest that pests may survive and reproduce more rapidly in patches where predators have access to alternative prey.  相似文献   

14.
Labonte JR 《ZooKeys》2011,(147):497-543
Nebria brevicollis (Fabricius) is one of the most frequently encountered and widely distributed carabid beetles in Europe. Until recently, the only North American records were based on two single specimens, both from the 1930's in southeastern Canada. In 2008, this species was found at thirteen different sites in five counties in northwestern Oregon. As of the end of 2010, it has been found in thirty-four different sites in ten Oregon counties, with a north-south range of ~150 km and an east-west range of ~90 km. It was also detected in 2010 in southwestern Washington (Vancouver), just north of Portland and the Columbia River.The ecological amplitude of Nebria brevicollis in Oregon rivals that of the most eurytopic native carabid species, e.g., Pterostichus algidus LeConte and Scaphinotus marginatus (Fischer von Waldheim). It has been found in highly degraded heavy industrial sites, agricultural fields, city parks, gardens, second growth woodlands, mature conifer forests, montane rock gardens, and otherwise pristine stands of old growth noble fir, with elevations ranging from essentially sea level to 1,249 meters. Climates at these locales vary from that of the Mediterranean Willamette Valley floor, where snow rarely occurs and summers are hot and dry, to the summit of the Oregon Coast Range, where deep snow may be present from November through April and summers are cool. The carabid communities in which Nebria brevicollis has been found range from those predominantly of fellow exotic species, e.g., at heavily perturbed sites, to those where it is the only exotic species, such as at the Coast Range summit.Nebria brevicollis is clearly an invasive species in that it is not restricted to anthropogenic habitats, is rapidly expanding its North American range, and can be abundant in essentially pristine settings. What is not yet clear is whether it is or will become a damaging species. Although it is already the most abundant carabid species in some settings, based upon pitfall catches, it is unknown whether this represents competitive superiority, trap vulnerability, or utilization of previously untapped or non-limiting resources. Deleterious ecological effects could include not only competition with other predators (including other carabid species) in agricultural and natural settings but also predation upon non-adult stages of threatened and endangered species of butterflies.  相似文献   

15.
Earthworms provide a major potential source of alternative food for polyphagous predators, such as carabid beetles, that are natural enemies of slugs, aphids and other agricultural pests. Non-pest prey may foster larger numbers of natural enemies, which then help to control pests, or alternatively may help to divert the predators away from pest control. An earthworm-specific monoclonal antibody was developed to study carabid-earthworm interactions in the field and assess the role of earthworms as alternative prey. The antibody could identify as little at 7 ng of earthworm protein in an ELISA, and could detect earthworm remains in the foregut of the carabid beetle Pterostichus melanarius for 64 h after consumption. Thirty-six per cent of field-collected beetles contained earthworm remains. Quantities of earthworm proteins in the beetle foreguts were negatively related to total foregut biomass, suggesting that earthworm consumption increased as total prey availability declined. There was also a negative relationship between foregut biomass and beetle numbers, but both quantities and concentrations of earthworm proteins in beetle foreguts were positively related to beetle numbers. This suggests that as beetle activity-density increased, total prey availability declined, or, as prey availability declined, beetles spent more time searching. In these circumstances, beetles fed to a greater extent on earthworms, an acceptable but nonpreferred food item. Earthworms may, therefore, provide an ideal alternative prey for P. melanarius, helping to sustain it when pest numbers are low but allowing it to perform a 'lying-in-wait' strategy, ready to switch back to feeding on pests when they become available.  相似文献   

16.
In order to investigate whether density affects dispersal, carabid beetles of two species, Harpalus rufipes (Degeer) and Pterostichus niger (Schaller), were released separately in six and two field enclosures, respectively. The enclosures were 4 m2 each and located in an oat field. The former species was released in seven densities, each with 12 replicates and the latter in five densities each with four replicates. Beetles leaving the centre of the enclosures were captured in pitfall traps along a 1 m wide strip of bare soil. Logistic models were fitted to the data. There were no significant effects of the density treatment variable on P. niger. For H. rufipes the best model was obtained by specifying the density treatment as a nominal variable. The deviance accounted for by this model was highly significant. There were, however, no consistent trends for either species with respect to the density treatment. The inclusion of climatic variables, the number of new beetles introduced at the onset of each trial, or the date of the trial did not improve the fit of any of the models. It is concluded that density did not significantly increase dispersal in the two species. It thus appears that a possible increase in behavioural interactions (i.e. interference competition) did not increase the dispersal in adults of the two species examined in this experiment.  相似文献   

17.
The impact of adult carabid beetles on below- and above-ground pests and fruit yield was examined in the laboratory and a two-year strawberry field study. In the laboratory, adults of Carabus nemoralis Muller, Nebria brevicollis (F.), Pterostichus algidus LeConte, Pterostichus melanarius (Illiger), and Scaphinotus marginatus Fischer (Coleoptera: Carabidae) consumed black vine weevil, Otiorhynchus sulcatus (F.) (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) eggs, larvae and/or pupae placed on the surface. The same five carabid species showed no impact or low removal rates of O. sulcatus larvae that had burrowed into the root of potted strawberry plants. In an assay with only P. melanarius, adults consumed O. sulcatus larvae placed on the soil surface more frequently than larvae buried 1.3 or 5?cm below. In a field study, the density of adult carabids, predominantly P. melanarius, was manipulated with augmented, exclusion, and open control plots (2?×?2?m). Manipulating carabid density had no impact on the removal of sentinel O. sulcatus larvae and pupae that were buried belowground which is consistent with laboratory observations. Increasing carabid density within augmented plots led to greater removal of red clover seeds, Trifolium pratense L., placed on the soil surface in the first?year. Decreasing carabid density within exclusion plots resulted in fewer marketable fruits compared to control plots in both years. These results suggest that certain adult carabids may have limited impact belowground, and some beneficial impacts above-ground with pest control and crop protection.  相似文献   

18.
Henrik Wallin 《Ecography》1989,12(3):201-212
Reproduction and survival of four carabid species commonly occurring in cereal fields in central Sweden were investigated. The adult-overwintering Pterostichus cupreus L. bred in early summer (June), and the largest proportion of sexually active beetles were found to be in their first breeding year; only a minority were 2 (or more) years old. In contrast, the larval-overwintering P. melanarius Illiger, P. niger Schaller and Harpalus rufipes De Geer had a biennal life cycle, and mainly old beetles (2 years or older) contributed to the population's reproductive effort each year. The long prereproductive adult phase in the larval-overwintering species and the relatively short summer in central Sweden prevented many new-generation adults from breeding in their first year. Several overlapping breeding cohorts are therefore present each year, and overwintered beetles bred throughout summer and during part of the autumn. Mandible wear (combined with other characters) was used to determine the age of beetles. However, the rate of mandible wear also was found to vary, depending upon the extent to which each species burrowed in the ground. The ecological significance of (a) a long adult life and (b) the existence of several overlapping breeding cohorts for reproduction and survival of populations in cereal fields is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Corn (Zea mays L.) and soybean (Glycine max Merrill) were planted in monoculture and strip-intercropping plots (18.3×15.5 m each) under conventional tillage and no-tillage to create differences in habitat structure. The effects of these agronomic practices on carabid beetle species composition were measured by pitfall-trap collections during three years. Although neither the number of individuals or number of species were significantly affected by treatments, analyses of variance indicated that four of the six dominant species (75.7% of the total number of carabids captured in three years) responded to tillage treatments.Harpalus pensylvanicus DeGeer andCyclotrachelus sodalis (LeConte) were more abundant in no-tillage plots, whereasPterostichus chalcites Say andScarites substriatus Haldeman were more common in conventional tillage plots.Pterostichus chalcites was also significantly more abundant in soybean plots than in intercropping or corn plots.H. pensylvanicus, a primarily herbivorous carabid, was the most common species collected. However,P. chalcites, a predaceous carabid, was the dominant species in soybean/conventional tillage plots. The results suggest that characteristics of individual species should be carefully considered for studies of communities such as carabid beetles, which have few strongly dominant species and a wide range of resource utilization.  相似文献   

20.
The increasing use of pesticides in broad-acre cropping in South eastern Australia is suspected to have reduced native carabid beetle populations which fortuitously control potential pest populations. Slugs are increasingly becoming an establishment pest of canola, which is often attributed to stubble retention introduced to arable farming systems. Exclusion enclosures were employed to test the effect of the native carabid Notonomus gravis on the exotic pest slug Deroceras reticulatum. The native predatory species limited D. reticulatum populations and this was further supported by a negative field association between the predator and slug numbers. However, while N. gravis contributed to control of slug populations, enclosure experiments suggest that slug damage was not reduced below economic thresholds by this predator alone. Although N. gravis provides a “lying in wait” pest control option for slugs, multiple predators and environmental interactions need to be considered in developing robust integrated pest management guidelines.  相似文献   

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