Spatial and temporal structure of the spider community in the clay semi-desert of western Kazakhstan

The spatial and temporal structure of spider communities was studied in the clay semi-desert of the north-western Caspian Lowland, western Kazakhstan (49°23' N, 46°47' E). The soils and vegetation are complex, being composed of a mosaic of desert and steppe plant communities. Besides the n...

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Main Author: Piterkina, Tatyana V.
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Arachnologische Gesellschaft (ARAGES) 2011-01-01
Series:Arachnologische Mitteilungen
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.arages.de/aramit/pdf/Heft_40/AM40_93_104.pdf
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spelling doaj-66c3c3a0b2664fec8aae88aa50f6cbb52020-11-24T23:01:03ZdeuArachnologische Gesellschaft (ARAGES)Arachnologische Mitteilungen1018-41712199-72332011-01-01409410410.5431/aramit4011596Spatial and temporal structure of the spider community in the clay semi-desert of western KazakhstanPiterkina, Tatyana V.The spatial and temporal structure of spider communities was studied in the clay semi-desert of the north-western Caspian Lowland, western Kazakhstan (49°23' N, 46°47' E). The soils and vegetation are complex, being composed of a mosaic of desert and steppe plant communities. Besides the native associations, there are plantations of different tree species. The ground-dwelling spider assemblages in the native habitats are the most diverse. The number of species inhabiting forest plantations is three times as small. Gnaphosidae is the leading family in the ground layer. They show high abundance and diversity levels during the whole season. Thomisidae, Lycosidae, Philodromidae, and Salticidae are abundant as well. The species diversity of herbage-dwelling spiders in different open native habitats is very similar. The spectrum of dominant families (Thomisidae, Oxyopidae, Araneidae, and Salticidae) and the seasonal dynamics of their ratio in desert and steppe associations have much in common. Spider assemblages of native and artificial habitats are characterised by change from multispecies polydominant spring-summer communities to impoverished imbalanced autumn ones. Seasonal changes in the species structure of mature spider groupings in native habitats are well pronounced, while the impact of seasonal conditions is even stronger than between-habitat differences. Complexes of typical species with different levels of habitat preference are revealed. http://www.arages.de/aramit/pdf/Heft_40/AM40_93_104.pdf Araneaeecologyhabitat preferenceseasonal dynamics
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Piterkina, Tatyana V.
spellingShingle Piterkina, Tatyana V.
Spatial and temporal structure of the spider community in the clay semi-desert of western Kazakhstan
Arachnologische Mitteilungen
Araneae
ecology
habitat preference
seasonal dynamics
author_facet Piterkina, Tatyana V.
author_sort Piterkina, Tatyana V.
title Spatial and temporal structure of the spider community in the clay semi-desert of western Kazakhstan
title_short Spatial and temporal structure of the spider community in the clay semi-desert of western Kazakhstan
title_full Spatial and temporal structure of the spider community in the clay semi-desert of western Kazakhstan
title_fullStr Spatial and temporal structure of the spider community in the clay semi-desert of western Kazakhstan
title_full_unstemmed Spatial and temporal structure of the spider community in the clay semi-desert of western Kazakhstan
title_sort spatial and temporal structure of the spider community in the clay semi-desert of western kazakhstan
publisher Arachnologische Gesellschaft (ARAGES)
series Arachnologische Mitteilungen
issn 1018-4171
2199-7233
publishDate 2011-01-01
description The spatial and temporal structure of spider communities was studied in the clay semi-desert of the north-western Caspian Lowland, western Kazakhstan (49°23' N, 46°47' E). The soils and vegetation are complex, being composed of a mosaic of desert and steppe plant communities. Besides the native associations, there are plantations of different tree species. The ground-dwelling spider assemblages in the native habitats are the most diverse. The number of species inhabiting forest plantations is three times as small. Gnaphosidae is the leading family in the ground layer. They show high abundance and diversity levels during the whole season. Thomisidae, Lycosidae, Philodromidae, and Salticidae are abundant as well. The species diversity of herbage-dwelling spiders in different open native habitats is very similar. The spectrum of dominant families (Thomisidae, Oxyopidae, Araneidae, and Salticidae) and the seasonal dynamics of their ratio in desert and steppe associations have much in common. Spider assemblages of native and artificial habitats are characterised by change from multispecies polydominant spring-summer communities to impoverished imbalanced autumn ones. Seasonal changes in the species structure of mature spider groupings in native habitats are well pronounced, while the impact of seasonal conditions is even stronger than between-habitat differences. Complexes of typical species with different levels of habitat preference are revealed.
topic Araneae
ecology
habitat preference
seasonal dynamics
url http://www.arages.de/aramit/pdf/Heft_40/AM40_93_104.pdf
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