Authors
Heike Antvogel, Aletta Bonn
Publication date
2001/8
Journal
Ecography
Volume
24
Issue
4
Pages
470-482
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
The microspatial distribution of carabid beetles in a pristine alluvial Quercus‐Ulmus forest along the river Elbe (north Germany) was investigated using 152 pitfall traps over a study period of 28 d. Traps were set in an area of only 100 × 120 m which comprised a wide range of microhabitats due to an extremely heterogeneous microrelief. Composition of the ground beetle assemblage was strongly influenced by microclimatic parameters and vegetation structure within a few metres: specifically soil moisture, light intensity. pH as well as cover of leaf litter and herbs. TWINSPAN analyses indicated a sensitive segregation of carabids into distinct microhabitats on a small scale. PCA and subsequent RDA distinguished two distinct species groups: species of wet deciduous woodland and species of wet open marsh habitats. The fringes of small temporary waters within the alluvial forest were of particular value for nature …
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