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Spatio-temporal determinants of arthropod biodiversity across an agro-ecosystem landscape
  • +14
  • Patrick Burgess,
  • Gustavo Betini,
  • Ashley Cholewka,
  • Jeremy DeWaard,
  • Stephanie DeWaard,
  • Cortland Griswold,
  • P. Hebert,
  • Andrew MacDougall,
  • Kevin McCann,
  • Jennifer McGroarty,
  • Eleish Miller,
  • Kate Perez,
  • Sujeevan Ratnasingham,
  • Dirk Steinke,
  • Emma Wright,
  • Evgeny Zakharov,
  • John Fryxell
Patrick Burgess
University of Guelph
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Gustavo Betini
University of Guelph
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Ashley Cholewka
University of Guelph
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Jeremy DeWaard
University of Guelph
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Stephanie DeWaard
University of Guelph
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Cortland Griswold
University of Guelph
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P. Hebert
University of Guelph
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Andrew MacDougall
Guelph
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Kevin McCann
University of Guelph
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Jennifer McGroarty
University of Guelph
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Eleish Miller
University of Guelph
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Kate Perez
University of Guelph
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Sujeevan Ratnasingham
University of Guelph
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Dirk Steinke
University of Guelph
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Emma Wright
University of Guelph
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Evgeny Zakharov
University of Guelph
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John Fryxell
University of Guelph

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Abstract

Arthropod communities globally are declining while undergoing taxonomic and functional homogenization, with agricultural activity being a strong contributory factor. Here we use DNA metabarcoding to quantify how variation in climate, agricultural intensity, and plant community composition shape spatiotemporal variation in a metacommunity of > 10,000 arthropod species sampled from 29 Malaise traps across 15 sites in southern Ontario, Canada. Local variation in plant community composition and canopy cover best explained arthropod community dissimilarity. Climatic variables followed closely as explanatory factors, driven primarily by seasonal variation in temperature. The proportion of agricultural land at the landscape scale had no detectable effect. Our results suggest that plant community composition, microclimate, and seasonality structured the arthropod metacommunity to considerable degree, factors that are rarely incorporated into assessments of biodiversity loss due to agriculture. We conclude that habitat restoration on marginal lands is likely an effective strategy for promoting arthropod biodiversity in agroecosystems.