Weather data
A large number of automatic weather stations has been implemented in the frame of the BIOTA AFRICA project by the Namibian National Botanical Research Institute (NBRI) and the Group "Biodiversity, Evolution and Ecology" (BEE) of the University of Hamburg. The website offers hourly updates of data and graphs of a large number of weather parameters.


BMBF Logo

 

< back

Subproject W06

Prof. Dr. K. Eduard Linsenmair, Department of Animal Ecology and Tropical Biology. Biozentrum, Am Hubland. D-97074 Wuerzburg, Germany

Determinants of small-scale mosaics of arthropod communities in natural and anthropogenically disturbed habitats

Introduction
The structure of ecological communities is influenced by many parameters: habitat characteristics, interactions between organisms, and stochastic events are considered as especially important local factors. In order to understand the influence these parameters exert on the structure of species-rich communities, arboricolous arthropod communities and driver ants (Dorylus nigricans) are investigated in the presented project.
As study areas, Comoé National Park and adjacent locations in the north-east of the Republic of Côte d'Ivoire were chosen. They comprise a complex system of quasi-natural and fire-influenced pasture ecosystems in a dynamic forest-savanna mosaic, supporting several savanna types, island forests and gallery forest.
From our own studies we know that clearly distinguishable arthropod communities occur in seemingly identical, neighboring habitats (conspecific savanna trees of comparable size). Individual plants were re-colonized by very similar communities after complete removal of arthropods. This finding demonstrates that deterministic factors which have not been identified so far are strongly influencing the structure of these assemblages. Besides, stochastic disturbances are studied as an additional factor potentially influencing community composition.

Objectives
In this project it is planned to exemplarily investigate the relevance of deterministic and stochastic factors for maintenance of local biodiversity in two well suited study systems in West Africa. Factors deterministically acting on the composition of and differences between individual communities are studied in the arboricolous arthropod assemblages mentioned above. European willow trees, well known for their intensively studied phytochemistry, will be included in these investigations later on for comparative purposes. The abundant driver ants will be used as a model system to analyze the effects which stochastically occurring disturbances exert on arthropod communities.
The results of these investigations, in concert with computer simulations and comparisons with communities in anthropogenically altered habitats, are considered to provide some deep insights into the understanding of important aspects of the origin, maintenance and functional properties of biodiversity. They should also provide a solid basis for the planning of diversity-supporting management measures, locally applicable to different biomes.

Background
Deterministic habitat heterogeneity and stochastic disturbances are most probably central mechanisms generating high local and regional diversity in natural environments. In anthropogenically altered landscapes, however, this small scale ß-diversity is eliminated in favor of a pronounced monotony. These changes can lead to a homogenization of species composition (dominance of ubiquists and generalists) and to a reduction of species diversity and can result in an unwelcome, enhanced sensitivity of these systems to biotic and abiotic environmental alterations.

Cooperation within BIOTA:


•  Dr. Gerald Braun (W01), DLR, description and analysis of small scale habitat heterogeneity with remote sensing data
•  Dr. Jörg Szarzynski (W02), University of Mannheim: provision of microclimatic data
•  Prof. Dr. Stefan Porembski (W04), University of Rostock: habitat characterization and determination of structural diversity by quantification of vegetation structure; insect herbivory of selected tree species

The research team:

Prof. Dr. K. Eduard Linsenmair, University of Wuerzburg: project leader
Karsten Mody (PhD candidate), University of Wuerzburg: arthropod communities on plants, animal-plant- and animal-animal-interactions
Christian Kost (PhD candidate), University of Wuerzburg: arthropod diversity and driver ants

External partners of cooperation:

Research museums: Alexander König, Bonn; Humboldt-Museum, Berlin; Naturkundemuseum, Stuttgart; British Museum, London; Musée National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris
Prof. Dr. U. Maschwitz, Frankfurt; Prof. Dr. B. Hölldobler, Wuerzburg (Myrmecology)
Prof. Dr. H.J. Poethke and Dr. T. Hovestadt, Wuerzburg/Fabrikschleichach (Computer simulation/modelling).
Prof. Dr. J. Grunert, Mainz (Pedology)
Centre de Recherche en Ecologie, Université d'Abobo-Adjamé, Côte d'Ivoire (local counterparts)