Dionisio-da-Silva Welton, Lira André Felipe de Araujo, Albuquerque Cleide Maria Ribeiro de
Programa de Pós-graduação em Biologia Animal, Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, UFPE, Rua Professor Moraes Rego S/N, Cidade Universitária, CEP 50670-420, Recife, PE, Brazil.
Programa de Pós-graduação em Biologia Animal, Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, UFPE, Rua Professor Moraes Rego S/N, Cidade Universitária, CEP 50670-420, Recife, PE, Brazil.
Zoology (Jena). 2018 Aug;129:17-24. doi: 10.1016/j.zool.2018.06.001. Epub 2018 Jun 6.
Edge effects have drastically affected species living in tropical forests. However, understanding how species respond to edge effects remains a challenge, owing to the many factors involved and different responses of each species thereto. Here, we analyzed how the abundance of two sympatric scorpion species (Tityus pusillus and Ananteris mauryi) and their potential prey varied as a function of microhabitat changes (litter depth, dry mass, and leaf shape) from edge to interior forest habitats. We further analyzed the contribution of potential prey to scorpion abundance and reproductive periods. Data were collected monthly at three 300-m² transects/site at distances of 10, 100, and 200m from the forest edge in a fragment of the Atlantic forest in northeastern Brazil, between April 2016 and March 2017. Scorpions responded differentially to edge effects, with A. mauryi abundance being similar along the edge-interior gradient, whereas T. pusillus had a higher abundance in the interior. As T. pusillus inhabit the top layer of the leaf litter, this species will possibly be more influenced by edge effects. In contrast, being a humicolous scorpion and inhabiting the bottom layers of leaf litter, A. mauryi would not be influenced by edge effects as much as T. pusillus. The reproductive period also was distinct between the two species, with T. pusillus reproducing in the dry season and A. mauryi in the rainy season. The oscillation in the abundance of different groups of prey at different periods maintained the overall prey abundance at a relatively constant level throughout the year, mitigating the effects of prey availability on the abundance and reproductive period of the scorpions. These results suggest that microhabitat exploitation is a key factor to sustain litter-dwelling scorpions in disturbed forest remnants and that T. pusillus can be an ecological indicator of edge effects.
边缘效应已对生活在热带森林中的物种产生了巨大影响。然而,由于涉及的因素众多且每个物种对此的反应不同,了解物种如何应对边缘效应仍然是一项挑战。在这里,我们分析了两种同域分布的蝎子物种(蒂氏真蝎和莫里异蝎)及其潜在猎物的数量如何随从森林边缘到内部栖息地的微生境变化(凋落物深度、干质量和叶片形状)而变化。我们进一步分析了潜在猎物对蝎子数量和繁殖期的贡献。2016年4月至2017年3月期间,在巴西东北部大西洋森林一片区域内,从距离森林边缘10米、100米和200米处的三个300平方米样带/地点每月收集数据。蝎子对边缘效应的反应存在差异,莫里异蝎的数量在边缘 - 内部梯度上相似,而蒂氏真蝎在内部的数量更高。由于蒂氏真蝎栖息在落叶层的顶层,该物种可能会受到边缘效应的更大影响。相比之下,莫里异蝎是一种栖息在落叶层底层的喜湿蝎子,其受边缘效应的影响不如蒂氏真蝎大。这两个物种的繁殖期也不同,蒂氏真蝎在旱季繁殖,莫里异蝎在雨季繁殖。不同时期不同猎物群体数量的波动使全年的总体猎物数量保持在相对稳定的水平,减轻了猎物可获得性对蝎子数量和繁殖期的影响。这些结果表明,微生境利用是维持受干扰森林残余地中落叶层栖息蝎子数量的关键因素,并且蒂氏真蝎可以作为边缘效应的生态指标。