Tunghai University Institutional Repository:Item 310901/27809
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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://140.128.103.80:8080/handle/310901/27809


    Title: Effects of Thinning on Spider Diversity of an East Asian Subtropical Plantation Forest
    Authors: 林惠真
    Huang, Pao-Shen
    Tso, I-Min
    Lin, Hui-Chen
    Lin, Liang-Kong
    Lin, Chung-Ping
    Contributors: Department of Life Science, Tunghai University
    Keywords: Biodiversity
    Chamaecyparis formosensis
    Forest management
    Araneae
    Taiwan
    Date: 2011-11
    Issue Date: 2016-08-10
    Publisher: 荷蘭:Elsevier B.V
    Abstract: Effects of thinning on spider diversity
    in an East Asian subtropical plantation forest. Zoological Studies 50(6): 705-717. Studies examining the effects
    of forest management on biodiversity in Asia are scarce and conducted mostly in temperate areas. In this study,
    the effects of the management on the biodiversity of a subtropical plantation forest were assessed by comparing
    the composition of spiders in Chamaecyparis formosensis plantations located in central Taiwan that received
    different degrees of thinning. Sampling plots were established in C. formosensis plantation stands receiving
    no, moderate, and heavy thinning treatments and a nearby natural broadleaf forest. The responses of spider
    communities in different strata of the plantation forests to thinning treatments varied. Heavy thinning treatment
    generated lower diversity indices in ground spiders and higher abundances in canopy spiders. Sampling plots
    in plantation stands receiving various thinning treatments differed in the compositions of ground, understory,
    and canopy spiders. Such composition variations resulted from abundance changes of ground weavers on the
    ground and orb weavers in the understory layer, which in turn seemed to be generated by reduced understory
    vegetation complexity due to the thinning treatments. Results of this study show that although thinning practices
    do not increase species richness in a subtropical C. formosensis plantation, they can generate alterations
    in understory vegetation structures which can lead to increased habitat heterogeneity and spider diversity in
    plantation forests.
    Relation: Zoological Studies, 50(6), 705-717
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Life Sciences ] Periodical Articles

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