Abstract

AbstractArboreal arthropod communities were censused by insecticidal knockdown in a plantation of Japanese cedar, Cryptomeria japonica, in central Japan from April 1983 to February 1985 at intervals of two months. All arthropods sampled were allocated to higher taxonomic groups or guilds and the composition of the communities was analyzed with respect to abundance, biomass and their seasonal trends. The total densities fluctuated seasonally from 200 to 3500 m−2; corresponding biomass values ranged from 7 to 600 mg fresh weight m−2. Maximum density and biomass generally occurred in summer and were minimum in winter. The consistently dominant guild in terms of abundance were the detritivores, mostly comprising Collembola and oribatid mites, accounting for 36–93% of all arthropods; phytophages, predators and detritivores were major guilds in terms of biomass, showing average proportions of 27%, 23% and 20%, respectively.Biomass ratios of predators to prey were generally high in some canopy communities, suggesting the importance of predation pressure in regulating the population levels of arthropods in forests. Average individual size of predators was approximately proportional to that of prey, irrespective of tree locality. Soil arthropod communities maintained densities approximately 102–103 times as large as the corresponding canopy communities throughout the year. The seasonal variations in abundance were much greater in canopy than in soil communities.

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