Abstract

Agrobiont spider species are well adapted to arable systems, which have fairly uniform vegetation structure and pest assemblages over continent-wide areas. We wanted to study, whether agrobiont spider sub- assemblages and the life history of the most prominent agrobiont, Pardosa agrestis, show any regional variation within Hungary, where only modest climatic differences exist between the NW and SE parts of the country. We studied agrobiont species of spider assemblages in 27 alfalfa and 21 cereal fields with suction sampling and pitfalls. The similarity structure of these agrobiont sub-assemblages (Sorensen distance measure) was congruent with the geographic distance matrices (Eucledian distance), as tested by Mantel tests. However, if we considered sub-assemblages consisting of the non-agrobiont species, this congruency was always higher. Thus, agrobionts responded only moderately to geographical variation if we compare them to non-agrobiont species. We studied the generation numbers and the occurrence of the first adult individuals in P. agrestis; the most common agrobiont spider in Hungary. This comparison involved comparing fields along a NW - SE gradient during 6 sampling years in pairwise comparisons, where in each year a northern and a southern population was compared with a minimum distance of 126 km in between. In generation numbers there was no difference; we found two generations across Hungary. In contrast, the first occurrence of adult individuals was on average 15 days earlier in both generations in the more southern populations. Thus, it can be concluded that agrobionts show a fairly stable and relatively low magnitude response over country-sized geographical ranges.

Highlights

  • Agrobiont spider species are well adapted to arable systems, which have fairly uniform vegetation structure and pest assemblages over continent-wide areas

  • Agrobiont spider species are well adapted to arable systems (SAMU & SZINETÁR 2002, KAJAK & OLESZCZUK 2004)

  • The objectives were (a) agrobiont sub-assemblages – where we studied the species composition – and (b) the life history of the most prominent agrobiont, Pardosa agrestis (Westring, 1861)

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Summary

Material and Methods

Regional differences in agrobiont sub-assemblages We studied the agrobiont sub-assemblages in 27 alfalfa and 21 cereal fields located in various regions of Hungary. When statistically considering the were considered (a significant difference: paired t-test non-agrobiont species of spider assemblages (= non- comparing average similarity – based on all possible agrobiont sub-assemblage), we only included those field pairings − of the agrobiont and non-agrobiont species into these analyses for which the whole data sub-assemblages for each crop and sample method set had a cumulated individual count ≥ 50. Rence of first adult individuals in the common agrobiont wolf spider Pardosa agrestis This comparison involved comparing fields along a NW – SE gradient during 6 sampling years (in the period 1993-2003) in pairwise comparisons, where in each year one north- ern and one southern population was compared, with a minimum distance of 126 km in between Population samples were collected by pitfalls, emptied at weekly intervals

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