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Sampling indigenous ground‐living beetles in a stand of non‐native tree privet (Ligustrum lucidum) in New Zealand raises new management questions
Authors:Dan Blanchon  John Pusateri  Mel Galbraith  Stephen Thorpe
Affiliation:1. (Department of Natural Sciences, Unitec Institute of Technology, Private Bag 92025, Auckland, New Zealand;2. Tel: 64 3. 9 4. 815 5. 4321;6. Email: dblanchon@unitec.ac.nz;7. Department of Architecture, Unitec Institute of Technology, Private Bag 92025, Auckland, New Zealand;8. School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand).
Abstract:Small urban forest reserves in New Zealand have been shown to have value in conserving indigenous beetle diversity. However there is little information available on the ability of non‐native vegetation areas such as tree privet to support indigenous beetle assemblages. To investigate this for one site, ground‐living beetles were collected using pitfall traps over a year at a small urban forest of the invasive tree Ligustrum lucidum (tree privet) in Auckland, New Zealand. A total of 815 beetles were found, from 20 families and 42 relative taxonomic units. Using monthly data, there was no correlation between soil moisture and diversity index (P = 0.805) or species richness (P = 0.375). These results raise the question of whether urban patches of non‐native tree privet may have potential as reservoirs of beetle diversity, if only until they are replaced with native vegetation.
Keywords:beetle assemblages  Coleoptera  indigenous species  introduced species  Ligustrum lucidum  New Zealand
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