Intensive Mowing Effect of One Patch on the Metapopulations of Two Phengaris Species

In the second half of the 20th century, change of land use in the name of intensive agriculture was one of the most important factors caused significant loss of butterfly diversity in Europe. Phengaris nausithous and Phengaris teleius belong among the flagship species associated with wet meadows and...

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Main Authors: Bubová T., Kulma M., Koleška D., Vrabec V.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2018-09-01
Series:Scientia Agriculturae Bohemica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/sab-2018-0027
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spelling doaj-7626ef36e6fc42c2abeecffe7542c2f62021-09-05T14:01:45ZengSciendoScientia Agriculturae Bohemica1211-31741805-94302018-09-0149320921510.2478/sab-2018-0027sab-2018-0027Intensive Mowing Effect of One Patch on the Metapopulations of Two Phengaris SpeciesBubová T.0Kulma M.1Koleška D.2Vrabec V.3Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources, Prague, Czech RepublicCzech University of Life Sciences Prague, Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources, Prague, Czech RepublicCzech University of Life Sciences Prague, Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources, Prague, Czech RepublicCzech University of Life Sciences Prague, Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources, Prague, Czech RepublicIn the second half of the 20th century, change of land use in the name of intensive agriculture was one of the most important factors caused significant loss of butterfly diversity in Europe. Phengaris nausithous and Phengaris teleius belong among the flagship species associated with wet meadows and are directly threatened by the intensive agriculture practises or management abandonment. Due to their very specific lifecycle, they are closely linked to their habitats and appropriate mowing management on their patches is thus crucial for their survival. Our research took place in Dolní Labe, Děčín, Czech Republic, on 16 patches and has been performed using Mark-Release-Recapture since 2009. This paper will illustrate how intensive mowing management, applied on only one of the patches, which forms only 9.4% of total locality size, can influence the entire local Phengaris metapopulation. The selected patch was intentionally mowed in the middle of flight season annually for four years. Even though, no significant effect was identified after the first year of study, after the second and third seasons, there was evidence of population decline of both studied species.https://doi.org/10.2478/sab-2018-0027mark-release-recaptureland use managementlepidopteraconservation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bubová T.
Kulma M.
Koleška D.
Vrabec V.
spellingShingle Bubová T.
Kulma M.
Koleška D.
Vrabec V.
Intensive Mowing Effect of One Patch on the Metapopulations of Two Phengaris Species
Scientia Agriculturae Bohemica
mark-release-recapture
land use management
lepidoptera
conservation
author_facet Bubová T.
Kulma M.
Koleška D.
Vrabec V.
author_sort Bubová T.
title Intensive Mowing Effect of One Patch on the Metapopulations of Two Phengaris Species
title_short Intensive Mowing Effect of One Patch on the Metapopulations of Two Phengaris Species
title_full Intensive Mowing Effect of One Patch on the Metapopulations of Two Phengaris Species
title_fullStr Intensive Mowing Effect of One Patch on the Metapopulations of Two Phengaris Species
title_full_unstemmed Intensive Mowing Effect of One Patch on the Metapopulations of Two Phengaris Species
title_sort intensive mowing effect of one patch on the metapopulations of two phengaris species
publisher Sciendo
series Scientia Agriculturae Bohemica
issn 1211-3174
1805-9430
publishDate 2018-09-01
description In the second half of the 20th century, change of land use in the name of intensive agriculture was one of the most important factors caused significant loss of butterfly diversity in Europe. Phengaris nausithous and Phengaris teleius belong among the flagship species associated with wet meadows and are directly threatened by the intensive agriculture practises or management abandonment. Due to their very specific lifecycle, they are closely linked to their habitats and appropriate mowing management on their patches is thus crucial for their survival. Our research took place in Dolní Labe, Děčín, Czech Republic, on 16 patches and has been performed using Mark-Release-Recapture since 2009. This paper will illustrate how intensive mowing management, applied on only one of the patches, which forms only 9.4% of total locality size, can influence the entire local Phengaris metapopulation. The selected patch was intentionally mowed in the middle of flight season annually for four years. Even though, no significant effect was identified after the first year of study, after the second and third seasons, there was evidence of population decline of both studied species.
topic mark-release-recapture
land use management
lepidoptera
conservation
url https://doi.org/10.2478/sab-2018-0027
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AT kulmam intensivemowingeffectofonepatchonthemetapopulationsoftwophengarisspecies
AT koleskad intensivemowingeffectofonepatchonthemetapopulationsoftwophengarisspecies
AT vrabecv intensivemowingeffectofonepatchonthemetapopulationsoftwophengarisspecies
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