Population biology, natural history and conservation of two endangered high elevation Neotropical butterflies

The southeastern Brazilian highlands harbor a high number of endemic and threatened species of animals and plants, including two species of Pampasatyrus butterflies (Satyrinae: Pronophilina). As for many other threatened Brazilian butterflies, there is virtually no biological information available f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of insect conservation 2020-08, Vol.24 (4), p.681-694
Hauptverfasser: Rosa, Augusto H. B., Ribeiro, Danilo B., Freitas, André V. L.
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container_title Journal of insect conservation
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creator Rosa, Augusto H. B.
Ribeiro, Danilo B.
Freitas, André V. L.
description The southeastern Brazilian highlands harbor a high number of endemic and threatened species of animals and plants, including two species of Pampasatyrus butterflies (Satyrinae: Pronophilina). As for many other threatened Brazilian butterflies, there is virtually no biological information available for these butterflies. A mark-recapture study was carried out for two consecutive years (2017 and 2018) to study population parameters, movement, natural history and threats for the two Pampasatyrus species. The results showed that population parameters of both species are similar to those of satyrine butterfly species from temperate regions, including a single flight season, short adult lifespan and a typical pattern of protandry (adult males flying before females). Moreover, adults were shown to have high habitat fidelity, being restricted to natural grassland, and are mostly sedentary. Both studied species are seriously threatened by human-caused impacts, including urban expansion, presence of non-native large grazing animals, uncontrolled tourism and natural and man-made fires. Although none of these impacts have been directly measured, a fire that consumed more than 70% of the study area in the winter of 2017 did not cause the extinction of the populations of both species, as evidenced by population numbers in 2018. The present study contributes important data on the population biology and ecology of these two threatened butterflies, providing information that can be used for future management plans of these species and their habitats.
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subjects Animal Ecology
Animal species
Animals
Biodiversity
Biology
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Butterflies & moths
Conservation Biology/Ecology
Elevation
Endangered & extinct species
Endemic species
Entomology
Grasslands
Life Sciences
Life span
Natural history
Original Paper
Parameters
Population
Population biology
Population studies
Protandry
Sedentary species
Species extinction
Threatened species
Tourism
Urban sprawl
title Population biology, natural history and conservation of two endangered high elevation Neotropical butterflies
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