Date of Award
1998
Document Type
Dissertation
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Department
Entomology
First Advisor
Dorothy Prowell
Abstract
Two habitats, a mixed hardwood forest and a longleaf pine savanna, were selected for analysis of moth composition. Three studies assessed differences between moth diversity, efficiency of sampling intensities, and effects of management practices in these habitats. The first study compared diversity and community composition between the two habitats based on 4,337 moths representing 394 species. The mixed hardwood habitat contained 314 species and the longleaf pine 208. Species overlap between two longleaf pine sites was as low as overlap between longleaf pine and mixed hardwood habitats (38%). Differences in moth richness between habitats may be a reflection of differences in plant structure and composition. A greater proportion of moth species unique to mixed hardwood sites fed on woody vegetation (61% for mixed hardwood versus 26% for longleaf pine), whereas more longleaf pine hostplants consisted of herbaceous vegetation (60% for longleaf pine versus 19% for mixed hardwood). The second study, which contrasted an intensive, short-term sampling survey with a long-term survey, recovered 6,970 moths representing 362 species. A high level of similarity was found between the two collections. The intensive collection required 55% of the time yet recovered 85--86% of species found in the long-term collection, suggesting intensive surveys can effectively sample diversity in a habitat if optimal. timing and appropriate taxa are considered. The third study compared moth diversity and species composition among longleaf pine sites that had undergone different burning regimes. A total of 4,272 moths representing 323 species were identified over two years of sampling. Growing and dormant season burn sites did not differ significantly in species richness, yet differences in species composition and host plant use were observed between all three management regimes. Whereas 55% of species unique to growing season sites fed on herbaceous vegetation and 27% fed on hardwoods, 33% of dormant species uniques fed on herbaceous vegetation and 49% utilized hardwoods. Host use for unburned sites indicated 15% were herbaceous and 67% hardwood feeders. Thus, moth species composition reflected differences in plant composition resulting from season of burn, and provided a more accurate measure of habitat response to management than diversity measures alone.
Recommended Citation
Landau, Deborah, "Moth Diversity in Louisiana Longleaf Pine Savannas and Mixed Mesophytic Hardwood Forests: Species Composition and Management Effects." (1998). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 6843.
https://repository.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/6843
ISBN
9780599213845
Pages
134
DOI
10.31390/gradschool_disstheses.6843