15 research outputs found
Testing abundance-range size relationships in European carabid beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae).
between abundance and range size (the sampling artifact, phylogenetic non-independence,
range position and resource breadth hypotheses) were tested by using atlas
data for carabid beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) from Belgium, Denmark and the
Netherlands. A positive relationship between abundance and partial range size was
found in all three countries, and the variation in abundance was lower for widespread
species. Analysis of the data did not support three of the proposed hypotheses, but
did support the resource breadth hypothesis (species having broader environmental
tolerances and being able to use a wider range or resources will have higher local
densities and be more widely distributed than more specialised species). Examination
of species’ characteristics revealed that widespread species are generally large bodied,
generalists (species with wide niche breadths occurring in a variety of habitat types)
and are little influenced by human-altered landscapes, while species with restricted
distributions are smaller bodied, specialists (species with small niche breadths occurring
in only one or two habitat types), and favour natural habitat. Landscape
alteration may be an important factor influencing carabid abundance and range size
in these three countries with a long history of human-induced environmental changes
Forty years of carabid beetle research in Europe - from taxonomy, biology, ecology and population studies to bioindication, habitat assessment and conservation
Volume: 100Start Page: 55End Page: 14