| Literature DB >> 29694360 |
Mário Boieiro1, Thomas J Matthews1,2, Carla Rego1, Luis Crespo3, Carlos A S Aguiar4, Pedro Cardoso1,5, François Rigal1,6, Isamberto Silva7, Fernando Pereira1, Paulo A V Borges1, Artur R M Serrano4.
Abstract
During the last few centuries oceanic island biodiversity has been drastically modified by human-mediated activities. These changes have led to the increased homogenization of island biota and to a high number of extinctions lending support to the recognition of oceanic islands as major threatspots worldwide. Here, we investigate the impact of habitat changes on the spider and ground beetle assemblages of the native forests of Madeira (Madeira archipelago) and Terceira (Azores archipelago) and evaluate its effects on the relative contribution of rare endemics and introduced species to island biodiversity patterns. We found that the native laurel forest of Madeira supported higher species richness of spiders and ground beetles compared with Terceira, including a much larger proportion of indigenous species, particularly endemics. In Terceira, introduced species are well-represented in both terrestrial arthropod taxa and seem to thrive in native forests as shown by the analysis of species abundance distributions (SAD) and occupancy frequency distributions (OFD). Low abundance range-restricted species in Terceira are mostly introduced species dispersing from neighbouring man-made habitats while in Madeira a large number of true rare endemic species can still be found in the native laurel forest. Further, our comparative analysis shows striking differences in species richness and composition that are due to the geographical and geological particularities of the two islands, but also seem to reflect the differences in the severity of human-mediated impacts between them. The high proportion of introduced species, the virtual absence of rare native species and the finding that the SADs and OFDs of introduced species match the pattern of native species in Terceira suggest the role of man as an important driver of species diversity in oceanic islands and add evidence for an extensive and severe human-induced species loss in the native forests of Terceira.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29694360 PMCID: PMC5918893 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0195492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Main characteristics of Terceira and Madeira islands and of their native forests.
Geographic, geological and ecological characteristics of the two study islands with information on their native forests. Data on tree species composition and on the actual and potential distribution of native forest in Madeira and Terceira were obtained from several references ([26, 27, 28, 32, 33] and references therein).
| Terceira | Madeira | |
|---|---|---|
| 402 | 741 | |
| 1023 | 1862 | |
| 3.5 | 5 | |
| Immature–lower geomorphological complexity | Mature–higher geomorphological complexity | |
| 37/1520 | 20/660 | |
| 23/402 | 150/600 | |
| 13.1–15.2 | 10.7–16.2 | |
| 94.7–98.9 | 87.7–97.4 | |
| 2497 | 1753 | |
| 15th century | 15th century | |
| 56,062 | 256,014 |
Diversity metrics following the Hill numbers (q) and relative abundance of ground beetles and spiders from the native forests of Terceira and Madeira.
| Terceira | Madeira | |
|---|---|---|
| Overall species richness ( | 7 | 34 |
| Estimated species richness (Jackknife 1) | 10.9±2.3 | 44.8±3.5 |
| Sample completeness | 0.64 | 0.77 |
| Exponential of Shannon-Wiener index ( | 2.94 | 7.61 |
| Simpson’s index ( | 2.77 | 4.55 |
| Berger-Parker index ( | 0.47 | 0.32 |
| Average species richness per site (and range) | 0.7 (0–4) | 5.1 (2–11) |
| Total number of individuals | 933 | 3915 |
| Average species abundance per site (and range) | 23.3 (0–649) | 83.3 (5–1051) |
| Proportion of introduced species | 0.57 | 0.09 |
| Proportion of endemic species | 0.29 | 0.88 |
| Overall species richness ( | 21 | 40 |
| Estimated species richness (Jackknife 1) | 23.9±1.6 | 51.7±4.3 |
| Sample completeness | 0.88 | 0.77 |
| Exponential of Shannon-Wiener index ( | 8.17 | 11.13 |
| Simpson’s index ( | 2.78 | 4.54 |
| Berger-Parker index ( | 0.30 | 0.40 |
| Average species richness per site (and range) | 4.8 (2–9) | 6.8 (0–15) |
| Total number of individuals | 866 | 1056 |
| Average species abundance per site (and range) | 21.6 (4–148) | 22.5 (0–79) |
| Proportion of introduced species | 0.43 | 0.18 |
| Proportion of endemic species | 0.43 | 0.55 |
Data on species richness and abundance (overall and average per site) are presented jointly with the proportion of endemics and introduced species in each island for both study groups.
Spider and ground beetle species richness, abundance and occupancy in Madeira and Terceira islands.
List of the sampled spider and ground beetle species in Madeira and Terceira native forests with functional and taxonomic (family-level) information and indication of their overall abundance, occupancy and distributional status (END—endemic; NAT—native non-endemic; INT—introduced).
| ISLAND | TAXONOMIC GROUP | SPECIES | DISTRIBUTION STATUS | OCCUPANCY | ABUNDANCE | FUNCTIONAL GROUP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Madeira | sheet-web builder | ||||||
| Madeira | sheet-web builder | ||||||
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | END | 14 | 22 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Miturgidae | END | 8 | 13 | hunter | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Clubionidae | NAT | 9 | 12 | hunter | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Theridiidae | INT | 32 | 133 | cobweb builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | INT | 3 | 5 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | cobweb builder | ||||||
| Madeira | hunter | ||||||
| Madeira | Araneae | Theridiidae | NAT | 3 | 4 | cobweb builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | NAT | 15 | 35 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Theridiidae | NAT | 20 | 31 | cobweb builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Mimetidae | INT | 1 | 1 | hunter | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | END | 2 | 3 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | sheet-web builder | ||||||
| Madeira | Araneae | Hahniidae | END | 13 | 19 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Dictynidae | END | 14 | 40 | mesh-web builder | |
| sheet-web builder | |||||||
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | END | 2 | 13 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | sheet-web builder | ||||||
| Madeira | Araneae | Salticidae | NAT | 11 | 22 | hunter | |
| Madeira | hunter | ||||||
| Madeira | Araneae | Gnaphosidae | END | 9 | 28 | hunter | |
| Madeira | orb-web builder | ||||||
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | NAT | 1 | 1 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Thomisidae | NAT | 1 | 1 | hunter | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Theridiidae | NAT | 2 | 3 | cobweb builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | NAT | 30 | 83 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Philodromidae | END | 1 | 2 | hunter | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | INT | 2 | 3 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Theridiidae | END | 21 | 33 | cobweb builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Theridiidae | NAT | 1 | 1 | cobweb builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | END | 3 | 31 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | INT | 40 | 420 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Tetragnathidae | INT | 1 | 1 | orb-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Theridiidae | INT | 7 | 12 | cobweb builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Theridiidae | END | 10 | 12 | cobweb builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Mysmenidae | END | 15 | 36 | 3D orb-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | END | 8 | 12 | sheet-web builder | |
| Madeira | Araneae | Araneidae | NAT | 1 | 1 | orb-web builder | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | INT | 1 | 1 | winged polyphagous | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 5 | 19 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 11 | 26 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | apterous generalist predator | ||||||
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 4 | 11 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 18 | 154 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 4 | 242 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 7 | 144 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 1 | 2 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | NAT | 1 | 1 | winged polyphagous | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 10 | 13 | apterous specialist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 1 | 1 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 4 | 7 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 1 | 1 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 9 | 99 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 6 | 42 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 31 | 1245 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 12 | 1244 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 23 | 137 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 1 | 12 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 1 | 1 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 37 | 205 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 2 | 5 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 6 | 63 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 3 | 13 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 2 | 17 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | INT | 1 | 1 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | apterous generalist predator | ||||||
| Madeira | apterous generalist predator | ||||||
| Madeira | apterous generalist predator | ||||||
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 5 | 23 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | INT | 5 | 18 | winged generalist predator | |
| Madeira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 18 | 152 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Madeira | apterous generalist predator | ||||||
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | END | 4 | 10 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | INT | 7 | 13 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | END | 17 | 36 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Dysderidae | INT | 10 | 21 | Hunter | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | INT | 3 | 3 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | INT | 1 | 2 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Mimetidae | INT | 7 | 11 | Hunter | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | INT | 2 | 2 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | END | 2 | 5 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | INT | 2 | 2 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | NAT | 12 | 40 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Lycosidae | END | 22 | 256 | Hunter | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Pisauridae | END | 5 | 6 | Hunter | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | END | 10 | 15 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Theridiidae | END | 21 | 107 | tangle- or cobweb builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Tetragnathidae | END | 1 | 1 | orb-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | NAT | 38 | 202 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | INT | 17 | 102 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Linyphiidae | END | 5 | 11 | sheet-web builder | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Thomisidae | NAT | 5 | 18 | Hunter | |
| Terceira | Araneae | Thomisidae | INT | 1 | 3 | Hunter | |
| Terceira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | INT | 1 | 1 | winged polyphagous | |
| Terceira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | INT | 1 | 1 | winged polyphagous | |
| Terceira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 9 | 186 | apterous generalist predator | |
| Terceira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | NAT | 1 | 1 | winged generalist predator | |
| Terceira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | INT | 8 | 436 | winged generalist predator | |
| Terceira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | INT | 1 | 2 | winged generalist predator | |
| Terceira | Coleoptera | Carabidae | END | 8 | 306 | apterous generalist predator | |
The distributional status follows [30] for Madeiran species and [31] for the Azorean ones. Rare species are highlighted in bold.
Fig 1Species abundance distributions (SADs) for spiders and ground beetles from the native forests of Terceira and Madeira islands.
The best fit models (logseries in red triangles and PLN in blue squares) are plotted together with the empirical data. The number of native species is presented in green while the number of introduced species is shown in white. (A) SAD of Terceira ground beetles. (B) SAD of Madeira ground beetles. (C) SAD of Terceira spiders. (D) SAD of Madeira spiders.
Model selection results for the species abundance distributions.
| Taxonomic group | Island | PLN | Logseries |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ground beetles | Terceira | 72.56 | |
| Madeira | 328.48 | ||
| Spiders | Terceira | 188.62 | |
| Madeira | 302.42 |
Goodness of fit and model selection results for the species abundance distributions of spiders and ground beetles from the native forests of Terceira and Madeira islands. The Akaike’s information criterion corrected for small sample size (AICc) is given for the two distributions—Logseries and Poisson lognormal (PLN)—and the model representing the best fit is highlighted in bold.
Fig 2Occupancy-frequency distributions (OFDs) for spiders and ground beetles from the native forests of Terceira and Madeira islands.
Overall species richness per occupancy class is shown in grey and the contribution of introduced species is highlighted in green. The mean and standard deviation of regional occupancy is shown together with the overall species richness (S) and the number of sampling units (n). (A) OFD of Terceira ground beetles. (B) OFD of Madeira ground beetles. (C) OFD of Terceira spiders. (D) OFD of Madeira spiders.
Modality of occupancy frequency distributions.
| Taxonomic group | Island | Distribution | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ground beetles | Terceira | <0.003 | < 0.001 | 0.52 | Unimodal |
| Ground beetles | Madeira | < 0.001 | < 0.001 | 0.97 | Unimodal |
| Spiders | Terceira | < 0.001 | < 0.001 | 0.64 | Unimodal |
| Spiders | Madeira | < 0.001 | < 0.001 | 0.98 | Unimodal |
Tokeshi test results for the modality of occupancy frequency distributions on spider and ground-beetle data from Madeira and Terceira (P, P, and P represent the results of the overall, left-, and right-most class modality tests, respectively).
Fig 3Evaluation of potential rare spider and ground beetle species from the native forests of Terceira and Madeira.
Potential rare species (i.e. low-abundance and range-restricted) were classified as tourists (red), microhabitat pseudo-rare species (green) and truly rare species (blue). The number of evaluated species (n) from each island and study group is also shown.