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Guild mobility affects spider diversity: Links between foraging behavior and sensitivity to adjacent vegetation structure
Authors:S.M. Cobbold  J.A. MacMahon
Affiliation:1. Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, University of Helsinki, Latokartanonkaari 5, FI-00014 Finland;2. Chair of Nature Conservation and Landscape Ecology, University of Freiburg, D-79106, Germany;3. Department of Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Box 7044, 750 07 Uppsala, Sweden;4. Biodiversity Unit, University of Turku, Vesilinnantie 5, FI-20014 Turku, Finland;5. Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Helsinki, Lahti, Finland;6. School of Life Sciences, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester CO4 3SQ, UK
Abstract:The movement patterns of species may affect their susceptibility to modified habitat structure. It is likely that sedentary species perceive habitat features at smaller spatial extents compared to mobile species, but there is a lack of experimental research on the effects of fine-scale habitat characteristics on organisms of differing mobility. Spiders display two basic mobility levels based on foraging behavior: web-building species are restricted to specific sites whereas active hunters are mobile. We collected spiders inhabiting sagebrush shrubs with a structurally enhanced, unmodified, or removed understory, to examine (1) whether habitat structure in the immediate vicinity of shrubs affected cursorial and web spiders differently in terms of abundance and species richness and (2) which genera most contributed to changes in community composition. Shrubs without understory had reduced cursorial spider densities and species richness compared to shrubs with added and unmodified understories, whereas web spiders lacked significant responses to treatments. Community-level differences based on relative abundance of genera were detected in cursorial spiders but not in web spiders, despite a strong contribution of the web-building genus Theridion to community dissimilarities. Our results support the hypothesis that sedentary organisms may be sensitive to contiguous habitat at finer spatial scales than cursorial organisms, and highlight the risks associated with only collecting local habitat information when studying mobile species.
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