Nyqvist, Daniel
- Politecnico di Torino
Research article2021Peer reviewedOpen access
Watz, Johan; Eckstein, Rolf Lutz; Nyqvist, Daniel
To predict the effects of habitat alterations on animal populations we need insight into how the habitat configuration influences local scale movements. This relationship may be particularly important for effective management of pest species. We tracked 80 PIT-tagged Spanish slugs (Arion vulgaris) in 16 x 16 m arenas with manipulated habitat fragmentation. The arenas had habitat patches consisting of high grass residing within a matrix of short grass, and the arenas with a high degree of fragmentation had 12 large (2 x 2 m), 13 medium-sized (1 x 1 m) and 12 small (0.5 x 0.5 m) patches, whereas the arenas with low fragmentation had four 4 x 4 m patches, resulting in equal amounts of total habitat patch area in the two treatments. The measured mean distance moved per day was 3.8 m, and between 0 and 25% of the slugs left the arenas each day. Fragmentation treatment had no effect on these two measurements. In the treatment with patches of different sizes, slugs distributed themselves among the patch size classes according to the total amount of habitat area for each habitat patch class, whereas patch edge did not explain the distribution pattern. All in all, fragmentation per se seems to play a minor role in the local movement and distribution of Spanish slugs.
Arion vulgaris; Arionid; Edge; Habitat use; Landscape; Pest; Spanish slug; Telemetry
Acta Oecologica
2021, volume: 112, article number: 103771
Publisher: ELSEVIER
Ecology
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/139655