Seasonal fluctuation, phenology and turnover of chafer assemblages - insight to the structural plasticity of insect communities in tropical farmlands

1 Studies on chafer assemblages were conducted on two farmland sites in the Terai lowland of Nepal (200 m above sea level) using light traps. During the course of a 2-year field monitoring program, a total of 4503 specimens was captured and an unexpectedly high number of syntopically co-occurring sp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Agricultural and forest entomology 2009-08, Vol.11 (3), p.265-274
Hauptverfasser: Ahrens, Dirk, Gc, Yubak Dhoj, Lago, Paul K, Nagel, Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:1 Studies on chafer assemblages were conducted on two farmland sites in the Terai lowland of Nepal (200 m above sea level) using light traps. During the course of a 2-year field monitoring program, a total of 4503 specimens was captured and an unexpectedly high number of syntopically co-occurring species was found: 52 from Gunganagar (GN) and 36 from Gaindakot (GK), respectively. Highest species abundances and species numbers were found during April and May. 2 Species occurrence was strongly correlated with air temperature and the maximum soil temperature, at least during the pre-monsoon season. However, assemblage structure from the two sites showed significant qualitative and quantitative changes seasonally, as well as from 1 year to the next. Turnover rates between adjacent months were in the range 26-62% (GN) and 37-70% (GK), whereas the turnover from 2004 to 2005 was 25.8% (GN) and 21.4% (GK) respectively. 3 When only dominant and subdominant taxa are considered, the seasonal change in species composition was even more striking. 4 Strong fluctuation in chafer assemblage over time suggests: (i) a possible influence of patchy habitat types and soil working on seasonal assemblage structure and (ii) colonization of suitable habitats (fields) in great part by chance.
ISSN:1461-9555
1461-9563
DOI:10.1111/j.1461-9563.2008.00439.x