Discordant response of spider communities to forests disturbed by deer herbivory and changes in prey availability
Date
2017-02-21
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Ecological Society of America
Abstract
Despite the breadth of research on impacts of dense ungulate populations and invasive plants
on native vegetation, work involving indirect effects on spider communities is explicitly lacking. Forest
spiders depend on palatable insect prey and habitat structure, both of which are affected by herbivory and
invasive vegetation. To examine the indirect interactions between spiders and these influential factors, we
sampled spider communities, insect prey, and vegetation in paired deer exclusion plots in central Maryland.
Spider abundance and richness increased with greater prey density, while increased habitat structure
from deer exclusion reduced species richness and the abundance of a dominant web-building species.
Multivariate analyses of spider families also demonstrated the importance of both prey availability and
structural complexity to spider community composition. This work identifies the importance of both
habitat structure and insect prey in defining the composition, abundance, and richness of forest spider
communities. A long history of heavy browsing pressure has resulted in local spider fauna consisting
of many species that are able to thrive in low-growing vegetation and open forest understories. Such
changes to vegetative structure from dense deer populations and invasive plants have the potential to
affect these important primary predators as well as araneophagic birds and the nutritional dynamics of
forest food webs.
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Landsman, A. P., and J. L. Bowman. 2017. Discordant response of spider communities to forests disturbed by deer herbivory and changes in prey availability. Ecosphere 8(2):e01703. 10.1002/ecs2.1703