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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://140.128.103.80:8080/handle/310901/20890


    Title: Habitat management by aboriginals promotes high spider diversity on an Asian tropical island
    Authors: Tsai, Z.-I., Huang, P.-S., Tso, I.-M.
    Contributors: Department of Life Science, Tunghai University
    Keywords: disturbance;habitat management;indigenous population;species diversity;spider;vegetation structure
    Date: 2006
    Issue Date: 2013-04-24T07:12:25Z (UTC)
    Abstract: Orchid Island, 92 km off the southeast coast of Taiwan, has the northernmost tropical forests in East Asia. We assessed effects of habitat management by Orchid Island inhabitants, the Yami people, on spider diversity by comparing assemblages collected from the ground to canopy among four habitats (natural forest, cultivated woodland, second growth forest and grasslands) that receive different degrees of disturbance. Species and guild composition did not differ among replicates of habitat but differed significantly among habitats. Variation in spider diversity was inversely correlated with vegetation density. Cultivated woodland subjected to an intermediate level of disturbances had a lower understory vegetation density than natural forest, but higher spider diversity. Neither insect abundance nor biomass varied significantly among habitats suggesting little room for effects of prey availability on spider diversity. It appears that the Yami people maintain high spider diversity on Orchid Island by generating novel habitat types with different vegetation structures and disturbance regimes. Copyright copy; Ecography 2006.
    Relation: Ecography 29 (1) , pp. 84-94
    Appears in Collections:[生命科學系所] 期刊論文

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