Arachnid Assemblage Composition Diverge between South- and North-Facing Slopes in a Levantine Microgeographic Site

Author:

Finkel Meir1ORCID,Ben-Asher Amit1,Shmula Gur1,Armiach Steinpress Igor1,Ganem Zeana1,Hammouri Rami1ORCID,Garcia Erika1,Szűts Tamás2ORCID,Gavish-Regev Efrat1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The National Natural History Collections, Edmond J. Safra Campus, Giva’at Ram, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 9190401, Israel

2. Department of Zoology, University of Veterinary Medicine Budapest, Rottenbiller Street 50, 1077 Budapest, Hungary

Abstract

Local microgeographic sites subdivided by sharp ecological and climatic contrasts are important platforms for measuring biodiversity patterns and inferring the possible effect of climatic and ecological variables on species distributions and habitat use. Here, we report results from 24 months (September 2019–August 2021) of continuous pitfall trapping collection in Lower Nahal Keziv, Western Upper Galilee, Israel (“Evolution Canyon” II (hereafter—EC II)). This site receives an average annual rainfall of 784 mm and contains two slopes that differ markedly by solar radiation and plant formation. The first is the south-facing slope (SFS), which is characterized as a semiarid garrigue and open grassland. The second is the contrasting north-facing slope (NFS), which is characterized by a more humid East Mediterranean forest. The slopes are separated by a narrow valley bottom (VB). Analysis of ca. 1750 arachnid specimens, collected from 70 pitfall traps along the slopes and valley, indicates significantly different arachnid assemblages between the NFS and SFS, likely due to the differences in solar radiation that affect plant-cover percentage, which in turn affects the arachnid assemblage composition. In addition to 98 arachnid taxa collected and identified to species and morphospecies level, this study resulted in the discovery of two species new to science, which are described as part of this publication (100 arachnid species and 11 additional taxa that were not identified to species, a total of 111 taxa). Our study, moreover, contributes new ecological data on the spatial and temporal distribution of arachnids, and therefore attests to the importance of year-round sampling in an understudied region. Overall, our study enables a better understanding of arachnid diversity and their distributions and serves as a reference for future research aimed at testing the effect of climate change and other environmental factors that influence arachnid assemblages in natural habitats.

Funder

University of Veterinary Medicine Budapest

Publisher

MDPI AG

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