Published October 19, 2016 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Effects of an increase in population of sika deer on beetle communities in deciduous forests

  • 1. Graduate School of Agriculture, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Fuchu, Japan
  • 2. School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

Description

The overabundance of large herbivores is now recognized as a serious ecological problem. However, the resulting ecological consequences remain poorly understood. The ecological effects of an increase in sika deer, Cervus nippon Temminck (Cervidae), on three insect groups of beetles was investigated: ground beetles (Carabidae), carrion beetles (Silphidae), and dung beetles (Scarabaeidae and Geotrupidae) on Nakanoshima Island, Hokkaido, northern Japan. We collected beetles on Nakanoshima Island (experimental site) and lakeshore areas (control site) and compared the species richness, abundance, diversity index, and community composition of beetles between the sites. Results showed that although both species diversity and abundance of carabid beetles were significantly higher at the lakeshore site, those of dung and carrion beetles were higher at the island site. It was additionally observed that abundance of larger carabid beetles was higher at the lakeshore site, whereas that of small-sized carabid beetles did not differ between the lakeshore and island sites. For dung beetles, abundance of smaller species was higher at the island site, whereas that of large species did not differ between the lakeshore and island sites. Abundance of two body sizes (small and large) of carrion beetles were both higher at the island site. Overall, the findings of this study demonstrated that an increase in deer population altered the insect assemblages at an island scale, suggesting further changes in ecosystem functions and services in this region.

Files

ZK_article_9116.pdf

Files (2.4 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:d28f71603938bb9d74a9a68d145d5d66
2.3 MB Preview Download
md5:984f03ec42da1c435772619cfa6d267c
144.8 kB Preview Download

Linked records