A comprehensive and micro-scale land snail and isopoda data set from 16 dolines of the Aggtelek Karst Area, Hungary, as described in Kemecei et al. 2014 and Vilisics et al. 2008.
Land snails were sampled during daylight hours between 16 and 18 of August, 2007. Samples were taken from four microhabitat types: litter, trunks of live trees, dead wood (also known as coarse woody debris), and rock.
In each of the 16 dolina, seven samples were collected in the litter microhabitat along a north-south transect. In the case of the other three microhabitat types, samples were collected from three random locations per microhabitat type in each dolina. A total of 256 samples were collected, each consisting 2 sub-samples collected by 2 sampling methods: litter samples (Q) and timed search (T).
One liter of litter samples including topsoil were collected to be examined later in the laboratory. Litter samples were collected adjacent to live wood, dead wood and rocks, and not from the wood or rocks themselves. Litter samples in the litter microhabitat were not collected near wood or rocks (minimum distance of 2 meters). During 5 minutes per site of time-restricted direct search we investigated microhabitats in a 1 meter radius circle around the litter sample location, but also including tree or rock surfaces.
The vertical zone (bottom, middle or edge of the dolinas), aspect of these sample locations, along with litter depth, and litter moisture (scored on an ordinal scale: 1=dry, 2=fresh, 3=moist) were also recorded.
Individuals were categorized based on being alive or dead (empty shells with different levels of shell deterioration.
For more details see References.
If using the Mollusca data, please cite Kemencei et al. 2014 along with the data citation given below.
Manual samplings have taken place between
16th and 18th August, 2007. We have chosen 16 do- lines of similar traits (Table 1). During time sam- pling, two persons (F. V. and A. N.) have collected isopods for 20 minutes in each site, spending 120 minutes with sampling altogether in each doline. Time sampling provides data eligible in respect of quantitative data analyses.
If using the Isopoda data, please cite Vilisics et al. 2008 along with the data citation given below.
Sólymos, P., Kemencei, Z. Páll-Gergely, B., Farkas, R., Vilisics, F., Nagy, A., Kisfali, M. & Hornung, E. (2016). Public data from the dolina project. Version 1.0. Zenodo, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.53080
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Kemencei, Z., Farkas, R., Pall-Gergely, B., Vilisics, F., Nagy, A., Hornung, E. & Solymos, P. (2014): Microhabitat associations of land snails in forested dolinas: implications for coarse filter conservation. Community Ecology 15:180--186.
Vilisics, F., Sólymos, P., Nagy, A., Farkas, R., Kemencei, Z. & Hornung, E. (2011): Small scale gradient effects on isopods (Crustacea, Oniscidea) in karstic sink holes. Biologia Bratislava, 66: 499-505.
Sólymos, P., Farkas, R., Kemencei, Z., Páll-Gergely, B., Vilisics, F., Nagy, A., Kisfali, M. & Hornung, E. (2009): Micro-habitat scale survey of land snails in dolines of the Alsó-hegy, Aggtelek National Park, Hungary. Mollusca, 27(2): 167-171.
Sólymos, P., Kemencei, Z., Páll-Gergely, B., Farkas, R., Vilisics, F. & Hornung, E. (2009): Does shell accumulation matter in micro scale land snail surveys? Malacologia, 51(2): 389-393.
Sólymos, P. (2009): Processing ecological data in R with the mefa package. Journal of Statistical Software, 29(8): 1-28.
Sólymos, P., Vilisics, F., Kemencei, Z., Páll-Gergely, B., Farkas, R., Nagy, A., Kisfali, M. & Hornung, E. (2009): Globális változás, lokális túlélés: kitettség és nedvességi grádiens hatása avarlakó gerinctelenekre. Természetvédelmi Közlemények, 15: 396-411.
Vilisics, F., Nagy, A., Sólymos, P., Farkas, R., Kemencei, Z. Páll-Gergely, B., Kisfali, M. & Hornung, E. (2008): Data on the terrestrial Isopoda fauna of the Alsó-hegy, Aggtelek National Park, Hungary. Folia Faunistica Slovaca, 13: 9-12.