2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2006.05.035
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Simplifying assessment of forest management practices for invertebrates: How effective are higher taxon and habitat surrogates for spiders following prescribed burning?

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Cited by 41 publications
(42 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(47 reference statements)
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“…The obvious advantage of sorting spiders at the family level, as opposed to species level is that in areas where the spider fauna is poorly known taxonomically, identification will be easier and hence faster. Some caution must be warranted in the interpretation of the results presented here, because they refer only to families that were active during the study period (Brennan et al, 2006). The numerical relationships found in this study also need to be tested outside the present study area.…”
Section: Correspondence Analysis (Ca)mentioning
confidence: 87%
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“…The obvious advantage of sorting spiders at the family level, as opposed to species level is that in areas where the spider fauna is poorly known taxonomically, identification will be easier and hence faster. Some caution must be warranted in the interpretation of the results presented here, because they refer only to families that were active during the study period (Brennan et al, 2006). The numerical relationships found in this study also need to be tested outside the present study area.…”
Section: Correspondence Analysis (Ca)mentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The bulk of spider families re-establishing the community and colonizing the burned ecosystems (RF and NPF) probably originated from two main groups: spiders that survived the fire and spiders that emigrated from the surrounding areas. Following a fire there is an immediate decline in spider abundance and taxa richness, at family and species levels, and ecosystem recovery takes less than three years (Brennan et al, 2006), therefore being fast. However, the findings in this study can only be related to active ground dwelling spider families and the results were interpreted under this point of view.…”
Section: Abundance Of Spider Familiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Observaciones similares han sido reportadas para artrópodos epígeos (Pik et al, 2002;Biaggini et al, 2007;Bang & Faeth, 2011), artrópodos epígeos y de hojarasca (Nakamura et al, 2007), Araneae, Coleoptera y Lepidoptera (Timms et al, 2013), Coleoptera y Nymphalidae (Uehara-Prado et al, 2009), Araneae (Brennan et al, 2006), Formicidae (Groc et al, 2010) y Oribatida (Caruso & Migliorini, 2006), abarcando un amplio espectro de métodos de captura, ecosistemas y perturbaciones antrópicas.…”
Section: Discussionunclassified