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Estimated density of four carabid beetle species in Mongolian oak and Korean red pine forest ecosystems on Baekdudaegan mountain range (Mt. Oade and Mt. Guryong) of South Korea
Authors:Do Sung Kim  Jung Lark Kim  Seong‐Joon Park  Jinhong Kim  Jieun Sung  Jongwoo Nam  Doo‐Sang Park  Taik ho Kim  Sung Ju Jin  Hoonbok Yi
Institution:1. The Institute for Conservation of Wild Species, Daejeon, Korea;2. Department of Health, Uiduk University, Gyeongju, Korea;3. The National Institute of Ecology, Seocheon, Korea;4. Department of Civil Eng, Chungang University, Seoul, Korea;5. Department of Biology, Seoul Women's University, Seoul, Korea;6. Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Daejeon, Korea;7. Department of Environmental Engineering, Kwangwoon University Graduate School, Seoul, Korea
Abstract:The estimation of animal population size is a primary field of interest for wildlife biologists, and such numerical estimation of wild animals is a very important factor in establishing national policy towards nature. Therefore, we performed this study to estimate the population density of carabid beetles preying on soil biota at the Mongolian oak (Quercus mongolica) forests and Korean red pine (Pinus densiflora) forests of two mountains, Mt. Odae and Mt. Guryong. We used the trapping web method with pitfall traps to collect the beetles. We calculated the estimated density of a total of four carabid beetle species in two specific regions and converted them to an estimated beetle population size within a certain area by using the study area. From our estimates, one beetle species, Leptocarabus seishinensis seishinensis L., displayed statistically significant results. Although there was no appreciable difference in the makeup of different carabid beetle species between the two forest communities, the population size of the beetle species was larger in Mongolian oak forests than in Korean red pine forests. The spatial distribution of carabid beetles by forest type did not show any preference for particular spots. Our results showed that carabid beetles did not have specific home ranges and that they were not density dependent. We expect to use the raw data to recognize the response of soil organisms to changes in the habitat environment and to track the patterns of change more accurately over long passages of time.
Keywords:beetles  carabid  Korean red pine  Mongolian oak  population
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