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Research article2010Peer reviewedOpen access

Effects of timing of grazing on arthropod communities in semi-natural grasslands

Lenoir, Lisette; Lennartsson, Tommy

Abstract

Arthropod communities were investigated in two Swedish semi-natural grasslands, each subject to two types of grazing regime: conventional grazing from May to September (continuous grazing) and traditional late management from mid-July (late grazing). Pitfall traps were used to investigate abundance of carabids, spiders, and ants over the grazing season. Ant abundance was also measured by mapping nest density during three successive years. Small spiders, carabids and ants (Myrmica spp.) were more abundant in continuous grazing than in late grazing while larger spiders, carabids, and ants (Formica spp.) were more abundant in late grazing. The overall abundance of carabids was higher in continuous grazing in the early summer but higher in late grazing in the late summer. The switch of preference from continuous to late grazing coincided with the time for larvae hibernating species replacing adult hibernating. We discuss possible explanations for the observed responses in terms of effects of grazing season on a number of habitat variables for example temperature, food resources, structure of vegetation, litter layer, competition, and disturbance.

Keywords

Aranidae; Carabidae; Formicidae; semi-natural pasture; timing of grazing

Published in

Journal of Insect Science
2010, Volume: 10, article number: 60
Publisher: UNIV ARIZONA

      SLU Authors

    • Associated SLU-program

      SLU Swedish Biodiversity Centre

      UKÄ Subject classification

      Ecology
      Agricultural Science

      Publication identifier

      DOI: https://doi.org/10.1673/031.010.6001

      Permanent link to this page (URI)

      https://res.slu.se/id/publ/60672