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The diversity of epigeal insects after the application of the brush packing restoration method following bush-encroachment control in South Africa


A. Marquart
O.B. Sikwane
K. Kellner

Abstract

Evidently, bush encroachment caused by factors, such as overgrazing, results in a change in savanna ecosystems. This shift in vegetation  structure can affect many factors, including insect fauna. Epigeal arthropods occupy smaller habitat patches and therefore respond to  the effects of bush encroachment at finer scales. Different restoration efforts to combat bush encroachment have been implemented. A  low-intensity management method is brush packing, which involves the use of removed woody branches to cover the soil surface. This  study  investigates whether the application of brush packing is effective in the restoration of insect communities. Total insect richness and  the tendency towards diversity were higher on bush-controlled plots, irrespective of brush packing. This trend was found for all  tested insect orders, except for Hymenoptera. However, non-metric multidimensional scaling ordination clustered distinctive insect  communities in areas where brush packing was applied. The results indicate that the application of brush packing results in higher  habitat heterogeneity and, consequently, more diversified insect communities on a small scale. We argue that brush packing application  does not only benefit vegetation structure, but can also improve insect community composition, thereby increasing overall ecosystem  health and stability, making this restoration method suitable for highly degraded areas.    


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1727-9380
print ISSN: 1022-0119