Ecological Groups of Coleoptera (Insecta) as Indicators of Habitat Transformation on Drained and Rewetted Peatlands: A Baseline Study from a Carbon Supersite, Kaliningrad, Russia
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- (1)
- Sweeping with entomological sweep nets during 7 days of field surveys (07.04.2023; 13.05.2023; 13.06.2023; 13.07.2023; 13.08.2023; 17.09.2023; 13.10.2023) in different terrestrial and aquatic biotopes of the study area;
- (2)
- Visual search of vegetation, soil, fungi, as well as under pieces of wood and bark with hand collection during 8 field survey days (07.04.2023; 13.05.2023; 13.06.2023; 13.07.2023; 13.08.2023; 17.09.2023; 13.10.2023; 17.11.2023) in different terrestrial biotopes of the study area;
- (3)
- Pitfall traps without bait (the 250 cm3 plastic containers with 9% acetic acid as a preservative liquid, placed in lines of 10 traps with a distance between traps of about 1 m) in seven-month periods between field surveys (07.04–13.05.2023; 13.05–13.06.2023; 13.06–13.07.2023; 13.07–13.08.2023; 13.08–17.09.2023; 17.09–13.10.2023; 13.10–17.11.2023) in 3 terrestrial biotopes of the studied area (Figure 2 and Figure 3). The trap lines were placed in: (1) the N edge of the peatland (sun-exposed site with Calluna, Eriophorum, and Betula coppice), (2) the SW edge of the peatland (dense birch stand); and (3) the central part of the peatland (sun-exposed site with partially bare peat, Campylopus introflexus, and Betula regrowth). Several containers were effective in attracting carrion beetles (Silphidae, Cholevinae) after the accidental capture of shrews, voles, and lizards in the originally unbaited trap.
- (1)
- Abundant (A)—species observed or sampled by ≥10 specimens/day or species pitfall-trapped by ≥10 specimens/month;
- (2)
- Frequent (F)—species observed or sampled by 5–9 specimens/day or species pitfall-trapped by ≥5–9 specimens/month;
- (3)
- Occasional (O)—species observed or sampled by 2–4 specimens/day or species pitfall-trapped by 2–4 specimens/month;
- (4)
- Rare (R)—species observed or sampled by single specimen/day or species pitfall-trapped by single specimen/month.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Taxonomic Structure and Abundance
3.2. Peat-Bog Biotope Fidelity and Habitat Structure
3.3. Ecological Characteristics and Peatland Habitat Affinity
3.3.1. Aquatic Beetles
3.3.2. Amphibiontic Beetles
3.3.3. Terrestrial Beetles
3.3.4. Miscellaneous Terrestrial Beetles
3.3.5. Epigeic Beetles
3.3.6. Plant-Associated Phytophagous Beetles
3.4. Note
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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No | Family | Vittgirrensky | Zehlau | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of Species | % | Number of Species | % | ||
1 | Cantharidae | 13 | 4.6 | 10 | 2.6 |
2 | Carabidae | 30 | 10.7 | 36 | 9.3 |
3 | Chrysomelidae | 24 | 8.5 | 41 | 10.6 |
4 | Coccinellidae | 10 | 3.6 | 20 | 5.2 |
5 | Curculionidae | 30 | 10.7 | 38 | 9.8 |
6 | Dytiscidae | 28 | 10.0 | 43 | 11.1 |
7 | Elateridae | 11 | 3.9 | 11 | 2.8 |
8 | Staphylinidae | 43 | 15.3 | 85 | 22.0 |
Coleoptera in total | 281 | 100 | 387 | 100 |
Peatland Habitat and Ecological Affinity | Tyrphophile Species |
---|---|
Aquatic acidophilic stagnobionts | Enochrus ochropterus, Hydrochus elongatus |
Amphibiontic beetles | Contacyphon variabilis |
Terrestrial dwarf shrub beetles | Malthodes pumilus, Scymnus suturalis |
Epigeic beetles | Acupalpus brunnipes, Brachygluta haematica, Bradycellus ruficollis, Curimopsis nigrita, Ischnosoma longicorne, Platydracus fulvipes, P. latebricola, Pselaphus heisei |
Phytophagous beetles | Altica longicollis, Micrelus ericae |
Habitat Affinity | Species |
---|---|
Aquatic environment | Haliplus ruficollis, Hyphydrus ovatus, Anacaena lutescens, Acilius canaliculatus, Hygrotus inaequalis, Hydroporus angustatus, H. neglectus |
Epigeic assemblage | Anthobium unicolor, Apocatops nigrita, Leistus terminatus, Nicrophorus vespilloides, Pterostichus niger, Sciodrepoides watsoni, Tachyporus dispar, Xantholinus longiventris, Amara famelica, Poecilus cupreus, Acidota crenata, Drusilla canaliculata, Oxypoda opaca, Philonthus cognatus |
Plant-associated beetles | Altica aenescens, Lochmaea caprea, Brachysomus echinatus, Polydrusus picus, Telmatophilus typhae, Bromius obscurus, Crepidodera aurata, Orchestes jota, Polydrusus cervinus, Sciaphilus asperatus |
Typical Central European Raised Bog (after [6]) | Vittgirrensky Peatland [28] |
---|---|
(1) Central bog pool | Hydrophilic communities in ditches (!)—only separate fragments and only for a limited period of time |
(2) Pine elfin forest | Absent |
(3) Open dead pine forest and treeless formation with high water level | Absent |
(4) Birches (Betula spp.) and pines (Pinus spp.) on inner lagg (moat) margin | Birch coppice (!)—only separate small fragments with Sphagna |
(5) Treeless lagg | Fen-like communities (!)—only for a limited period of time |
(6) Border communities between lagg and surrounding forest | Absent |
(7) Surrounding forest | - Wet forest (birch and aspen) - Dry birch stand - Dense closed-canopy stand |
Absent | Birch coppice (most part without Sphagna) |
Absent | Dry shrublands |
Absent | Wet shrublands |
Absent | Reed beds |
Absent | Bare-peat sites |
Reophilic Species | Eurytopic Stagnobionts | Acidophilic Stagnobionts |
---|---|---|
Gyrinus substriatus, Haliplus immaculatus, H. lineatocollis, H. ruficollis, P. caesus, Noterus clavicornis, Acilius canaliculatus, A. sulcatus, Agabus bipustulatus, Dytiscus dimidiatus, Graphoderus cinereus, Graptodytes pictus, Hydaticus seminiger, Hydroporus obscurus, H. palustris, Hygrotus impressopunctatus, H. inaequalis, Hyphydrus ovatus, Ilybius ater, Laccophilus minutus, Porhydrus lineatus, Rhantus suturalis, Scarodytes halensis | Haliplus fulvus, Clemnius decorates, Graptodytes granularis, Hydaticus transversalis, Hydroporus angustatus, H. dorsalis, H. erythrocephalus, H. glabriusculus, H. neglectus, H. planus, Ilybius guttiger, Rhantus exsoletus, Helophorus aquaticus, H. granularis, H. flavipes, Anacaena lutescens, Cymbiodyta marginella, Enochrus coarctatus, E. testaceus, Helochares obscurus, Hydrobius fuscipes, Hydrochara caraboides, Laccobius minutus, Limnebius crinifer, Ochthebius minimus | Enochrus ochropterus, Hydrochus elongatus |
Plant-Associated Phytophagous Beetles | Epigeic Elements | ‘Miscellaneous’ Coleoptera |
---|---|---|
Attelabidae, Brentidae, Byturidae, Buprestidae, Chrysomelidae, Curculionidae, Kateretidae, Megalopodidae, Nitidulidae, Phalacridae | Byrrhidae, Carabidae, Staphylinidae, necrobiontic Dermestidae, Silphidae, Leiodidae: Cholevinae | Cantharidae, Cerambycidae, Coccinellidae, Cryptophagidae, Elateridae, Endomychidae, Latridiidae, Leiodidae, Lucanidae, Malachiidae, Mordellidae, Oedemeridae, Pyrochroidae, Scarabaeidae, Scraptiidae, Tenebrionidae, Throscidae |
Fodder Plants | Phytophagous Beetle Species |
---|---|
Calluna vulgaris | Altica longicollis and Micrelus ericae |
Betula spp. | Altica aenescens, Betulapion simile, Orchestes jota, Phyllobius argentatus, Polydrusus cervinus |
Salix spp. | Archarius salicivorus, Byctiscus betulae, Crepidodera aurata, Cryptocephalus decemmaculatus, Cryptocephalus ocellatus, Pachybrachis hieroglyphicus, Polydrusus picus, Temnocerus coeruleus, Trachys minutus |
Salix spp. and Betula spp. | Lochmaea caprea, Rhamphus pulicarius |
Populus tremula | Byctiscus populi, Chrysomela populi, Zeugophora subspinosa |
Alnus glutinosa | Agelastica alni |
Polygophagous on Cruciferae | Brassicogethes viridescens, Phyllotreta atra, Phyllotreta striolata |
Polyphagous on arboreal plants | Phyllobius pyri |
Cyperaceae | Phalacrus championi |
Gramineae | Oulema obscura |
Lythrum salicaria | Nanophyes marmoratus |
Typha latifolia | Telmatophilus typhae |
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Alekseev, V.; Napreenko, M.; Napreenko-Dorokhova, T. Ecological Groups of Coleoptera (Insecta) as Indicators of Habitat Transformation on Drained and Rewetted Peatlands: A Baseline Study from a Carbon Supersite, Kaliningrad, Russia. Insects 2024, 15, 356. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects15050356
Alekseev V, Napreenko M, Napreenko-Dorokhova T. Ecological Groups of Coleoptera (Insecta) as Indicators of Habitat Transformation on Drained and Rewetted Peatlands: A Baseline Study from a Carbon Supersite, Kaliningrad, Russia. Insects. 2024; 15(5):356. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects15050356
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlekseev, Vitalii, Maxim Napreenko, and Tatiana Napreenko-Dorokhova. 2024. "Ecological Groups of Coleoptera (Insecta) as Indicators of Habitat Transformation on Drained and Rewetted Peatlands: A Baseline Study from a Carbon Supersite, Kaliningrad, Russia" Insects 15, no. 5: 356. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects15050356
APA StyleAlekseev, V., Napreenko, M., & Napreenko-Dorokhova, T. (2024). Ecological Groups of Coleoptera (Insecta) as Indicators of Habitat Transformation on Drained and Rewetted Peatlands: A Baseline Study from a Carbon Supersite, Kaliningrad, Russia. Insects, 15(5), 356. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects15050356