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Micro-habitat features determine oviposition site selection in High Brown and Dark Green Fritillaries

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Micro-habitat features determine oviposition site selection in High Brown and Dark Green Fritillaries. / Simons, Julia; Oxbrough, Anne; Menéndez, Rosa et al.
In: Journal of Insect Conservation, Vol. 27, No. 5, 31.10.2023, p. 841-853.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Simons, J, Oxbrough, A, Menéndez, R & Ashton, P 2023, 'Micro-habitat features determine oviposition site selection in High Brown and Dark Green Fritillaries', Journal of Insect Conservation, vol. 27, no. 5, pp. 841-853. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10841-023-00503-w

APA

Vancouver

Simons J, Oxbrough A, Menéndez R, Ashton P. Micro-habitat features determine oviposition site selection in High Brown and Dark Green Fritillaries. Journal of Insect Conservation. 2023 Oct 31;27(5):841-853. Epub 2023 Aug 11. doi: 10.1007/s10841-023-00503-w

Author

Simons, Julia ; Oxbrough, Anne ; Menéndez, Rosa et al. / Micro-habitat features determine oviposition site selection in High Brown and Dark Green Fritillaries. In: Journal of Insect Conservation. 2023 ; Vol. 27, No. 5. pp. 841-853.

Bibtex

@article{aa8452067887494698fced55f45aa38d,
title = "Micro-habitat features determine oviposition site selection in High Brown and Dark Green Fritillaries",
abstract = "Abstract: The survival of butterfly populations depends on successful oviposition strategies. The limited mobility of early life stages requires females to select sites that reflect larval requirements. However, as land use and climate changes are altering habitat conditions and micro-climate, some species may adapt ovipositing strategies and flourish while others, with narrow niche requirements, may be unable to respond. Oviposition site selection and micro-habitat niche is examined for two closely related butterfly species—the specialist High Brown Fritillary (Fabriciana adippe) and relative generalist Dark Green Fritillary (Speyeria aglaja) through field observations of egg-laying females and analysis of micro-habitat characteristics. A total of 104 oviposition behaviour observations across both species were recorded in 69 1 m 2 quadrats, with the habitat characteristics compared to randomly selected quadrats in the same area. Results show that higher host plant density was a positively significant factor for oviposition site selection only for the High Brown Fritillary. Moreover, the cover of live Bracken (Pteridium aquilinum) and grass were important for site selection in both species, with High Brown Fritillaries tolerating less live Bracken and grass cover than Dark Green Fritillaries. This confirms the more specific requirements and narrower micro-habitat niche of the High Brown Fritillary, which appears to be more sensitive to micro-habitat cooling. Implications for insect conservation: The management of Bracken mosaic habitats for these two species should aim to supress grass growth and maintain Bracken density within limits, by opening the Bracken canopy on a rotation through grazing or manual cutting, ensuring a continuous supply of suitable micro-habitat.",
keywords = "Insect Science, Nature and Landscape Conservation, Animal Science and Zoology, Ecology",
author = "Julia Simons and Anne Oxbrough and Rosa Men{\'e}ndez and Paul Ashton",
year = "2023",
month = oct,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1007/s10841-023-00503-w",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "841--853",
journal = "Journal of Insect Conservation",
issn = "1366-638X",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Micro-habitat features determine oviposition site selection in High Brown and Dark Green Fritillaries

AU - Simons, Julia

AU - Oxbrough, Anne

AU - Menéndez, Rosa

AU - Ashton, Paul

PY - 2023/10/31

Y1 - 2023/10/31

N2 - Abstract: The survival of butterfly populations depends on successful oviposition strategies. The limited mobility of early life stages requires females to select sites that reflect larval requirements. However, as land use and climate changes are altering habitat conditions and micro-climate, some species may adapt ovipositing strategies and flourish while others, with narrow niche requirements, may be unable to respond. Oviposition site selection and micro-habitat niche is examined for two closely related butterfly species—the specialist High Brown Fritillary (Fabriciana adippe) and relative generalist Dark Green Fritillary (Speyeria aglaja) through field observations of egg-laying females and analysis of micro-habitat characteristics. A total of 104 oviposition behaviour observations across both species were recorded in 69 1 m 2 quadrats, with the habitat characteristics compared to randomly selected quadrats in the same area. Results show that higher host plant density was a positively significant factor for oviposition site selection only for the High Brown Fritillary. Moreover, the cover of live Bracken (Pteridium aquilinum) and grass were important for site selection in both species, with High Brown Fritillaries tolerating less live Bracken and grass cover than Dark Green Fritillaries. This confirms the more specific requirements and narrower micro-habitat niche of the High Brown Fritillary, which appears to be more sensitive to micro-habitat cooling. Implications for insect conservation: The management of Bracken mosaic habitats for these two species should aim to supress grass growth and maintain Bracken density within limits, by opening the Bracken canopy on a rotation through grazing or manual cutting, ensuring a continuous supply of suitable micro-habitat.

AB - Abstract: The survival of butterfly populations depends on successful oviposition strategies. The limited mobility of early life stages requires females to select sites that reflect larval requirements. However, as land use and climate changes are altering habitat conditions and micro-climate, some species may adapt ovipositing strategies and flourish while others, with narrow niche requirements, may be unable to respond. Oviposition site selection and micro-habitat niche is examined for two closely related butterfly species—the specialist High Brown Fritillary (Fabriciana adippe) and relative generalist Dark Green Fritillary (Speyeria aglaja) through field observations of egg-laying females and analysis of micro-habitat characteristics. A total of 104 oviposition behaviour observations across both species were recorded in 69 1 m 2 quadrats, with the habitat characteristics compared to randomly selected quadrats in the same area. Results show that higher host plant density was a positively significant factor for oviposition site selection only for the High Brown Fritillary. Moreover, the cover of live Bracken (Pteridium aquilinum) and grass were important for site selection in both species, with High Brown Fritillaries tolerating less live Bracken and grass cover than Dark Green Fritillaries. This confirms the more specific requirements and narrower micro-habitat niche of the High Brown Fritillary, which appears to be more sensitive to micro-habitat cooling. Implications for insect conservation: The management of Bracken mosaic habitats for these two species should aim to supress grass growth and maintain Bracken density within limits, by opening the Bracken canopy on a rotation through grazing or manual cutting, ensuring a continuous supply of suitable micro-habitat.

KW - Insect Science

KW - Nature and Landscape Conservation

KW - Animal Science and Zoology

KW - Ecology

U2 - 10.1007/s10841-023-00503-w

DO - 10.1007/s10841-023-00503-w

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 841

EP - 853

JO - Journal of Insect Conservation

JF - Journal of Insect Conservation

SN - 1366-638X

IS - 5

ER -