Title of article :
Landscape occupancy and local population size depends on host plant distribution in the butterfly Cupido minimus Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Jochen Krauss ، نويسنده , , Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter، نويسنده , , Teja Tscharntke، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
We tested whether the landscape occupancy and local population size of the monophagous butterfly Cupido minimus can be predicted by patch size and isolation of its host plant or by other habitat characteristics. C. minimus and its larval food plant Anthyllis vulneraria are classified as rare and endangered in northern Germany. Adults of C. minimus are ranked as the most sedentary butterfly species in northern Europe.
Around the city of Göttingen (Germany), we checked all known locations of A. vulneraria (n=70) in June 2002 for butterfly eggs (in blooming flowerheads) and adult butterflies (within 20-min transects).
We found eggs of C. minimus or a high number of adults (>7) in all habitats with A. vulneraria (which are calcareous grasslands) even when isolated up to 2–4 km. In multiple regression analyses, local population size of adult butterflies was positively related to the cover of its larval food plant A. vulneraria explaining 65% of variance. Cover of A. vulneraria increased with increasing habitat area and increasing cover of plant species in flower and decreased with increasing cover of shrub layer. Habitat isolation and further factors describing habitat quality were not related to C. minimus population size or cover of its larval food plant.
The results suggest that dispersal ability of C. minimus is greater than expected and that management should focus to increase A. vulneraria patches. For conservation, low impact grazing once a year and removing of excessive shrubs in winter seems to be the most appropriate strategies.
Keywords :
Anthyllis vulneraria , Dispersal ability , habitat fragmentation , Habitat quality , Isolation
Journal title :
Biological Conservation
Journal title :
Biological Conservation