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Interactive effects of fire and large herbivores on web-building spiders
Author(s) -
Claire N. Foster,
Philip S. Barton,
J. T. Wood,
David B. Lindenmayer
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
oecologia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.328
H-Index - 195
eISSN - 1432-1939
pISSN - 0029-8549
DOI - 10.1007/s00442-015-3323-5
Subject(s) - herbivore , ecology , understory , biology , biodiversity , vegetation (pathology) , disturbance (geology) , species richness , food web , ecosystem , canopy , medicine , paleontology , pathology
Altered disturbance regimes are a major driver of biodiversity loss worldwide. Maintaining or re-creating natural disturbance regimes is therefore the focus of many conservation programmes. A key challenge, however, is to understand how co-occurring disturbances interact to affect biodiversity. We experimentally tested for the interactive effects of prescribed fire and large macropod herbivores on the web-building spider assemblage of a eucalypt forest understorey and investigated the role of vegetation in mediating these effects using path analysis. Fire had strong negative effects on the density of web-building spiders, which were partly mediated by effects on vegetation structure, while negative effects of large herbivores on web density were not related to changes in vegetation. Fire amplified the effects of large herbivores on spiders, both via vegetation-mediated pathways and by increasing herbivore activity. The importance of vegetation-mediated pathways and fire-herbivore interactions differed for web density and richness and also differed between web types. Our results demonstrate that for some groups of web-building spiders, the effects of co-occurring disturbance drivers may be mostly additive, whereas for other groups, interactions between drivers can amplify disturbance effects. In our study system, the use of prescribed fire in the presence of high densities of herbivores could lead to reduced densities and altered composition of web-building spiders, with potential cascading effects through the arthropod food web. Our study highlights the importance of considering both the independent and interactive effects of disturbances, as well as the mechanisms driving their effects, in the management of disturbance regimes.

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