Changes in conservation value from grasslands to savannas to forests: How a temperate canopy cover gradient affects butterfly community composition.

Temperate savannas and grasslands are globally threatened. In the Midwest United States of America (USA), for example, oak savannas persist today at a small percentage of recent historic coverage. Therefore, restoration of habitats of low and intermediate canopy cover is a landscape conservation pri...

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Main Authors: Ralph Grundel, Gary S Dulin, Noel B Pavlovic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234139
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author Ralph Grundel
Gary S Dulin
Noel B Pavlovic
author_facet Ralph Grundel
Gary S Dulin
Noel B Pavlovic
author_sort Ralph Grundel
collection DOAJ
description Temperate savannas and grasslands are globally threatened. In the Midwest United States of America (USA), for example, oak savannas persist today at a small percentage of recent historic coverage. Therefore, restoration of habitats of low and intermediate canopy cover is a landscape conservation priority that often emphasizes returning tree density to a savanna-like target value. Understanding how animal species react to such changes in vegetation structure is important for assessing the value of these restoration plans. We examined how butterfly community attributes in northwest Indiana USA, including community composition, richness, and abundance responded to a grassland-to-forest gradient of canopy cover. Butterfly community composition under intermediate canopy cover differed significantly from community composition in the most open or closed-canopy habitats. Composition of the plant community in flower was a significant predictor of three assessed attributes of the butterfly community-composition, richness, and abundance. Phenology, expressed as day-of-the-year, was also a strong predictor of these butterfly community attributes. Few butterfly species were habitat specialists as adults although canopy cover was a more important predictor of adult community composition than of richness or abundance of butterflies. Therefore, adult butterfly community differences along the canopy cover gradient were less about butterfly communities filled with habitat specialists for different canopy-defined habitats and more about gradual changes in community composition along this gradient. Overall, butterfly community richness was predicted to peak at about 34% canopy cover, butterfly abundance at about 53% canopy cover, community conservation value at about 59% canopy cover, and a combination of desirable conservation attributes-high diversity, high abundance, and high conservation value-was predicted to reach a peak of co-occurrence at about 67% canopy cover suggesting that habitats of intermediate canopy cover might be particularly effective for butterfly conservation in this region.
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spelling doaj.art-e7519f41b106414dbb6e60593a9d3e7c2022-12-21T21:55:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01156e023413910.1371/journal.pone.0234139Changes in conservation value from grasslands to savannas to forests: How a temperate canopy cover gradient affects butterfly community composition.Ralph GrundelGary S DulinNoel B PavlovicTemperate savannas and grasslands are globally threatened. In the Midwest United States of America (USA), for example, oak savannas persist today at a small percentage of recent historic coverage. Therefore, restoration of habitats of low and intermediate canopy cover is a landscape conservation priority that often emphasizes returning tree density to a savanna-like target value. Understanding how animal species react to such changes in vegetation structure is important for assessing the value of these restoration plans. We examined how butterfly community attributes in northwest Indiana USA, including community composition, richness, and abundance responded to a grassland-to-forest gradient of canopy cover. Butterfly community composition under intermediate canopy cover differed significantly from community composition in the most open or closed-canopy habitats. Composition of the plant community in flower was a significant predictor of three assessed attributes of the butterfly community-composition, richness, and abundance. Phenology, expressed as day-of-the-year, was also a strong predictor of these butterfly community attributes. Few butterfly species were habitat specialists as adults although canopy cover was a more important predictor of adult community composition than of richness or abundance of butterflies. Therefore, adult butterfly community differences along the canopy cover gradient were less about butterfly communities filled with habitat specialists for different canopy-defined habitats and more about gradual changes in community composition along this gradient. Overall, butterfly community richness was predicted to peak at about 34% canopy cover, butterfly abundance at about 53% canopy cover, community conservation value at about 59% canopy cover, and a combination of desirable conservation attributes-high diversity, high abundance, and high conservation value-was predicted to reach a peak of co-occurrence at about 67% canopy cover suggesting that habitats of intermediate canopy cover might be particularly effective for butterfly conservation in this region.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234139
spellingShingle Ralph Grundel
Gary S Dulin
Noel B Pavlovic
Changes in conservation value from grasslands to savannas to forests: How a temperate canopy cover gradient affects butterfly community composition.
PLoS ONE
title Changes in conservation value from grasslands to savannas to forests: How a temperate canopy cover gradient affects butterfly community composition.
title_full Changes in conservation value from grasslands to savannas to forests: How a temperate canopy cover gradient affects butterfly community composition.
title_fullStr Changes in conservation value from grasslands to savannas to forests: How a temperate canopy cover gradient affects butterfly community composition.
title_full_unstemmed Changes in conservation value from grasslands to savannas to forests: How a temperate canopy cover gradient affects butterfly community composition.
title_short Changes in conservation value from grasslands to savannas to forests: How a temperate canopy cover gradient affects butterfly community composition.
title_sort changes in conservation value from grasslands to savannas to forests how a temperate canopy cover gradient affects butterfly community composition
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234139
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AT noelbpavlovic changesinconservationvaluefromgrasslandstosavannastoforestshowatemperatecanopycovergradientaffectsbutterflycommunitycomposition