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Original Articles

The effects of forest fragmentation on the population ecology and natural history of a funnel-web spider

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Pages 211-231 | Received 14 Jun 2013, Accepted 23 Mar 2014, Published online: 02 Jun 2014
 

Abstract

Habitat fragmentation strongly affects the abundance, distribution, body size and population genetics of invertebrates. Urban growth in Brazil has led to severe fragmentation, especially in the Atlantic Forest and savannas. The effects of this fragmentation on the common funnel-web spider Aglaoctenus lagotis were examined in two forest fragments within the interior savanna: a smaller fragment within an urban environment and a larger fragment within a rural environment. The reproductive period occurred in October, coinciding with the beginning of the rainy season, when the species was aggregated in the two forest fragments. The smaller fragment contained a larger population, and the spiders had a larger average prosoma size and web area. The presence of a larger population in a smaller area within the urban centre may reflect a limited dispersal ability, reduced predator abundance or low interspecific competition. The larger prosoma length and web area in the smaller habitat fragment suggest greater resource availability and a higher probability of capturing prey in the urban environment. In both areas, a larger number of capture threads was positively correlated with the presence of inquiline spiders in the webs. The genetic data indicate close similarity between and within the two areas, indicating that the species has low genetic variability or that the areas studied, consistent with their proximity, have separated only recently. Most savannas and forests in midwestern Brazil have recently undergone severe fragmentation, and further studies of this nature are needed.

Acknowledgements

We thank the president, directors and employees of the Clube Pica-Pau (Woodpecker Club) for authorizing this research in their permanent preservation area. We also thank the municipal government of Araguari, the environmental department, and the employees of the John Kennedy Woodland Park (Parque Bosque John Kennedy) for their assistance in this study.

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