DIVERSITY OF GROUND-ACTIVE SPIDER COMMUNITY ACROSS DIFFERENT TROPICAL FOREST HABITATS AND CLIMATE CONDITIONS IN NORTHERN VIETNAM

Authors

  • Do Thi Ha Faculty of Education, Thai Nguyen College, Thai Nguyen province, Vietnam
  • Dinh Thi Thu Ha Faculty of Basic Knowledge, Vietnam Dance Academy, Hanoi city, Vietnam
  • Pham Dinh Sac Vietnam National Museum of Nature, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, Hanoi city, Vietnam

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18173/2354-1059.2025-0029

Keywords:

ground-active spiders, regional climate, Northern Vietnam

Abstract

A year-long survey of ground-active spiders was conducted in three typical tropical forest areas of Northern Vietnam, each characterized by distinct climatic conditions: Cuc Phuong National Park (CPNP, tropical monsoon climate of the Red River Delta), Tam Dao National Park (TDNP, high-elevation tropical monsoon climate), and Cat Ba National Park (CBNP, maritime climate). Four types of habitats were selected in each region: natural forest and disturbed forest (both with multi-layered vegetation structures), and shrubland and acacia plantation (both with simple-layer vegetation structures). Spiders were sampled using pitfall traps. Cursorial hunters and ground-level web builders were the dominant guilds in all study areas. Spider diversity was compared across the study areas. Cluster analysis showed that the species composition in the maritime climate area (CBNP) was significantly different from that in the other areas. Spider diversity was also compared between habitats with multi-layer vegetation structures (multi-LVS) and those with simple-layer vegetation structures (simple-LVS). Both species composition and spider abundance were higher in habitats with multi-LVS than those with simple-LVS. The results of this study highlight the importance of preserving natural ecological processes to conserve biodiversity in multi-VLS habitats and to aid in the restoration of biodiversity in simple-LVS habitats.
Keywords: ground-active spiders, regional climate, Northern Vietnam.

References

[1] Ceballos G & Ehrlich PR, (2002). Mammal population losses and the extinction crisis. Science, 296(5569), 904–907. DOI: 10.1126/science.1069349.

[2] Buddle CM, Spence JR & Langor DW, (2000). Succession of boreal spider assemblages following wildfire and harvesting. Ecography, 23, 434–436.

[3] Vu DT, Vu QG, Tran QK, Tran T, Bui MH & Pham DS, (2023). Diversity and ecology of spiders (Araneae) in the buffer zones of three national parks in northern Vietnam. HNUE Journal of Science, 68(2), 173–182.

[4] Pham DS, Xu X & Li SQ, (2007). A preliminary note on spider fauna of Vietnam (Arachnida: Araneae). Acta Arachnologica Sinica, 16(2), 121–128.

[5] Ono H, Ta HT & Pham DS, (2012). Spiders (Arachnida, Araneae) recorded from Vietnam, 1837–2011. Memoirs of the National Science Museum, Tokyo, 48, 1–37.

[6] Lin Y, Li SQ & Pham DS, (2023). Taxonomic notes on some spider species (Arachnida: Araneae) from China and Vietnam. Zoological Systematics, 48(1), 1–99.

[7] Wang C, Li SQ & Pham DS, (2023). Thirteen species of jumping spiders from Northern Vietnam (Araneae, Salticidae). Zookeys, 1148, 119–165.

[8] Rypstra AL, (1983). The importance of food and space in limiting web-spider densities: A test using field enclosures. Oecologia, 59(2), 312–316.

[9] Gunnarsson B, (1992). Fractal dimension of plants and body size distribution in spiders. Functional Ecology, 6, 636–641.

[10] Morse DR, Lawton JH, Dodson MM & Williamson MH, (1985). Fractal dimension of vegetation and the distribution of arthropod body lengths. Nature, 314, 731–733.

[11] Andow DA, (1991). Vegetational diversity and arthropod population response. Annual Review of Entomology, 36, 561–586.

[12] Hawksworth DL & Kalin-Arroyo MT, (1995). Magnitude and distribution of biodiversity. In: Heywood VH (ed) Global Biodiversity Assessment. United Nations Environment Programme. Cambridge University Press, London, 107–192.

[13] Rosenzweig ML, (1995). Species Diversity in Space and Time. Cambridge University Press, New York, p. 436.

[14] Thai VT, (2000). Forest Vegetation of Vietnam. Science and Technology Publishing House, Hanoi, Vietnam, p. 276.

[15] Do DT, (2001). Tam Dao National Park. Agricultural Publishing House, Hanoi, p. 102.

[16] Vo Q, Nguyen BT, Ha DT & Le VT, (1996). Cuc Phuong National Park. Agricultural Publishing House, Hanoi, Vietnam, p. 76.

[17] Sørensen LL, (2004). Composition and diversity of the spider fauna in the canopy of a montane forest in Tanzania. Biodiversity and Conservation, 13, 437–452.

[18] Corey DT, Stout IJ & Edwards GB, (1998). Ground surface spider fauna in sandhill communities of Florida. Journal of Arachnology, 26, 303–316.

[19] Bonte D, Baert L, Lens L & Maelfait JP, (2004). Effects of aerial dispersal, habitat specialisation, and landscape structure on spider distribution across fragmented grey dunes. Ecography, 27(3), 343–349.

[20] Gillespie RG & Roderick GK, (2002). Arthropods on islands: Colonization, speciation, and conservation. Annual Review of Entomology, 47, 595–632.

[21] Gillespie RG, Croo HB & Hasty GL, (1997). Phylogenetic relationships and adaptive shifts among major clades of Tetragnatha spiders (Araneae: Tetragnathidae) in Hawaii. Pacific Science, 51, 380–394.

[22] Miller SE & Eldredge LG, (1996). Numbers of Hawaiian species: Supplement 1. Bishop Museum Occasional Papers, 88, 62–79.

[23] Juan C, Ibrahim KM, Oromi P & Hewitt GM, (2000). Colonization and diversification: Towards a phylogeographic synthesis for the Canary Islands. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 15, 104–109.

[24] Russell-Smith A & Stork NE, (1994). Abundance and diversity of spiders from the canopy of tropical rainforests with particular reference to Sulawesi, Indonesia. Journal of Tropical Ecology, 10, 545–558.

[25] Bonte D, Leon B & Maelfait JP, (2002). Spider assemblage structure and stability in a heterogeneous coastal dune system. Journal of Arachnology, 30, 331–343.

[26] Russell-Smith A, (2002). Comparison of diversity and composition of ground-active spiders in Mkomazi Game Reserve, Tanzania and Etosha National Park, Namibia. Journal of Arachnology, 30(2), 383–388.

[27] Zehm A, Nobis M & Schwabe A, (2003). Multiparameter analysis of vertical vegetation structure based on digital image processing. Flora, 198(2), 142–160.

[28] Tsai ZI, Huang PS & Tso IM, (2006). Habitat management by aboriginals promotes high spider diversity on an Asian tropical island. Ecography, 29, 84–94.

[29] Connell JH, (1978). Diversity in tropical rainforests and coral reefs. Science, 199, 1302–1310.

[30] Holloway JD, Kirk-Spriggs AH & Khen CV, (1992). The response of some rainforest insect groups to logging and conservation in plantation. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 335, 425–436.

[31] Goehring D, Daily GC & Sekercioglu CH, (2002). Distribution of ground-dwelling arthropods in tropical countryside habitats. Journal of Insect Conservation, 6, 83–91.

[32] Almquist S, (1973). Spider associations in coastal sand dunes. Oikos, 24, 444–457.

[33] Downie IS, Wilson WL, Abernethy VJ, McCracken DI, Foster GN, Ribera I, Murphy KJ & Waterhouse A, (1999). The impact of different agricultural land use on epigeal spider diversity in Scotland. Journal of Insect Conservation, 3, 273–286.

Downloads

Published

30-06-2025

How to Cite

Thi Ha, D., Thi Thu Ha, D., & Dinh Sac, P. (2025). DIVERSITY OF GROUND-ACTIVE SPIDER COMMUNITY ACROSS DIFFERENT TROPICAL FOREST HABITATS AND CLIMATE CONDITIONS IN NORTHERN VIETNAM. Journal of Science Natural Science, 70(2), 138-150. https://doi.org/10.18173/2354-1059.2025-0029