Effects of abiotic restoration through rock addition on invertebrate functional diversity in native temperate grasslands

Author:

Roberts Isobel12ORCID,Milner Richard N. C.2,Howland Brett3,Lumbers James34,Gilbert Maree2,Smith Annabel L.1

Affiliation:

1. School of the Environment University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland 4067 Australia

2. Parks and Conservation Service Australian Capital Territory Government Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

3. Office of Nature Conservation Australian Capital Territory Government Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

4. Research School of Biology Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory 2601 Australia

Abstract

Invertebrates account for over 90% of all described species and provide crucial ecosystem services. Land clearing, including the removal of abiotic habitat features, threatens invertebrate biodiversity, making environmental restoration crucial for conservation. However, little is known about the effects of abiotic restoration compared to the restoration of biotic features. To determine if rock addition increased invertebrate biodiversity, we introduced 120 t of rocks to 10 sites across five grassland reserves in the Australian Capital Territory in a before‐after‐control‐impact design. We sampled invertebrates using pitfall traps before treatment in 2016 and after rock addition in 2019 (during record‐breaking drought). We recorded 29,164 individual invertebrates from 19 orders and undertook a functional trait‐based analysis of rock effects on the invertebrate community. No effects of rock addition were observed on the probability of occurrence, richness, diversity, community similarity, or abundance of any taxonomic or functional group. The abundance of snare‐building spiders and large ants was higher in the control plots at the end of the experiment. These abundance responses in 2019 did not differ from the control or treatment plots in 2016. Thus, some combination of drought and rock addition appears to have neutralized a positive temporal change that was evident without rocks. Despite a regionwide, replicated restoration effort and an extensive functional analysis of invertebrate communities, very little positive response to rock addition was recorded. Rock addition did not have a negative effect on grassland invertebrate biodiversity and may still be beneficial to the long‐term conservation and restoration of vertebrate and invertebrate communities.

Funder

ACT Government

Publisher

Wiley

Reference80 articles.

1. Habitat Restoration for Endemic Lizards in an Oilfield in Payunia, Argentina

2. Use of terrestrial invertebrates for biodiversity monitoring in Australian rangelands, with particular reference to ants

3. AntWiki(2011)Australia species identification key.https://www.antwiki.org/wiki/Category:Australian_species_identification_key(accessed 30 May 2022)

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