Arthropods and birds in the forest–tundra of Western Siberia and the edge effect


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Abstract

Over 2500 species of invertebrate macrofauna and over 177 species of avifauna live in the forest–tundra of the Lower Ob region and adjacent areas of the northern taiga and shrub tundra. About half of the invertebrate species of the study area are northern—mostly hypo- and hemiarctic—tundra species; the rest are boreal and arctomontane-boreal Holarctic and trans-Palearctic species. The anthophilic and aerobiont insect assemblages include many boreal forest forms. A total of 153 species have been observed nesting at the taiga–foresttundra boundary; 81 species have been observed nesting at the tundra–forest-tundra boundary. The avifauna of the forest–tundra becomes enriched with taiga species in floodplain forests and with tundra species on the flat interfluve, in areas of tundra and tundra-like wetlands. The forest–tundra of the Lower Ob region has no avifauna and entomofauna of its own and contains a mixture of taiga and tundra faunas. It has been found that the ecotone effect is not pronounced in the taxonomic composition of birds and insects in the forest–tundra, where only some particular groups (such as amphibiont insects) have increased abundance.

About the authors

V. N. Olschwang

Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, Ural Branch

Author for correspondence.
Email: olschw@mail.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Vos’mogo Marta 202, Yekaterinburg, 620144

V. N. Ryzhanovskii

Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, Ural Branch

Email: olschw@mail.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Vos’mogo Marta 202, Yekaterinburg, 620144

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