Abstract
Simple SummaryInsect pests and their natural enemies can harbor in riparian zones. To determine the impact of insect communities on agriculture and ecology, we must quantitatively assess insect populations in riparian areas. To identify the appropriate methodology for effective insect sampling in riparian areas, we assessed sweep sampling within three plant communities using different numbers of subsampling units (50 sweeps carried out twice, or 10 sweeps over 10 times) over two years. The results reveal that effective insect sampling varies between different plant communities and insect orders. The similarities between terrestrial insect communities in the same plant community were relatively high, even in different years. The optimum sampling size to obtain approximately 80% of the total species was estimated for each survey site. Our results lay the foundations for providing techniques to assess insect populations within riparian areas to predict and prevent herbivorous insect pest invasions in the future.To investigate insect and plant community relationships in riparian zones, terrestrial insect communities were compared in plant communities in the riparian zone of the Miho River, Korea. The sweep netting method was used to sample insects in 50 m transects in three herbaceous plant communities. In 2020, each plant community—Chenopodium album, Beckmannia syzigachne, and Artemisia indica—was swept 100 times (50 sweeps × 2). In 2021, two communities had an additional 100 sweeps collected using 10 subsamples of 10 sweeps (excluding C. album communities). The surveyed dominant species or subdominant species of the insect community in each site preyed on the dominant plant species at the site. The Bray–Curtis similarity was significantly higher than the Sørensen similarity when comparing datasets across different years for the same plant species community. The predicted optimum sampling size to obtain approximately 80% of the total species estimated to be at each survey site, for effective quantitative collection of terrestrial insect herbivores in each plant community, was examined. Fifty sweeps were required for the A. indica community and 100 sweeps were required for the B. syzigachne community. The results of this study provide important data for riparian biodiversity conservation and future pest monitoring.
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