Artificial bare patches increase habitat for the endangered Ohlone tiger beetle (Cicindela ohlone) |
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Authors: | Tara M. Cornelisse Michael C. Vasey Karen D. Holl Deborah K. Letourneau |
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Affiliation: | 1. Environmental Studies Department, University of California Santa Cruz, 1156 High St., Santa Cruz, CA, 95064, USA
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Abstract: | The endangered Ohlone tiger beetle (Cicindela ohlone) depends on bare ground areas in California coastal grasslands to encounter mates, oviposit, and find prey. We tested habitat creation as a potential management strategy to increase the availability of oviposition sites for C. ohlone. We compared three different bare ground treatments by scraping off surface vegetation, ripping, and tamping the plots. We also tested whether bare ground creation expands C. ohlone range within a habitat patch by scraping plots at increasing distances from the core habitat and monitoring C. ohlone colonization. C. ohlone oviposited significantly more in artificial bare ground plots compared to controls both one and 2 years after the scrapes were created. Distance from the core habitat did not affect colonization nor did decompaction of scraped plots. Percent bare ground significantly predicted incidence of colonization. For the conservation of the endangered Ohlone tiger beetle, we recommend continued creation of scraped plots every 2 years in order to maintain bare ground and to ensure maximum usage by female C. ohlone as oviposition sites. |
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