Abstract
Mass outbreaks of pests defoliating Scots pine monocultures are of constant concern to foresters, and the increase in their frequency under conditions of a warming climate is expected. Repeated mass outbreaks usually involve the same areas, which suggests that predispositions to pest attack are shaped by certain stand characteristics or their habitat conditions. The aim of the study was to examine whether the soil invertebrate communities of pine forests with A. posticalis mass outbreaks differ from those of stands with no mass occurrence of this pest, despite analogous stand-habitat conditions and close proximity. Pine monocultures in two regions of Poland differing in the timing of the pest's mass occurrence were selected for the study. The soils of the studied monocultures, both in outbreak areas and reference tree stands, were characterized by strong acidity and low nutrient status. A lower (soil invertebrate communities) and a higher (Collembola communities) taxonomic resolution were used to assess the differences between the soil fauna of infected and reference stands. We show that soil invertebrate communities of the mass outbreak areas were characterized by impoverishment compared to those of reference forests. However, both invertebrate and Collembola communities, which in outbreak areas consisted of fewer taxa, did not differ significantly in density from reference tree stands. Nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) ordination of the collembolan communities revealed that not only their composition but also their structure in the mass outbreak areas differed significantly from those of uninfected tree stands. Further research is needed to clarify whether the depletion of soil invertebrates is a result of foliar insect feeding, or is rather a manifestation of weakened stands increasing their predisposition to attacks by pest insects.
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