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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Seasonality of Litter Insects and Relationship with Rainfall in a Wet Evergreen Forest in South Western Ghats

TLDR
The seasonality of litter insect abundance and its relationship with rainfall was analyzed in a wet evergreen forest on the windward side of south Western Ghats and Coleoptera was the dominant group in all seasons.
Abstract
The seasonality of litter insect abundance and its relationship with rainfall was analyzed in a wet evergreen forest on the windward side of south Western Ghats. Monthly litter samples were collected using Berlese funnels during 4 seasons of a year: southwest monsoon season June—August), northeast monsoon season (September—November), summer (March -May) and pre-summer season (December—February). Insect fauna as a whole showed no seasonal variation in abundance, however, some individual insect orders showed significant seasonal variation. Overall insect fauna and individual orders were distributed independently relative to rainfall. All insect orders with the exception of Psocoptera were present during all four seasons. Coleoptera (42%) was the dominant group in all seasons followed by Formicidae (12.3%), insect larvae (10.1%), Collembola (9.2%) and Thysanoptera (8.9%). Exceptionally high abundance of Ptiliidae contributed to the unprecedented abundance of litter Coleoptera. The aseasonality of litter insect fauna as a whole is attributed to year-round availability of rainfall and the absence of severe summer conditions.

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Seasonality, extractive foraging and the evolution of primate sensorimotor intelligence.

TL;DR: Foraging observations on four groups of wild capuchins (Cebus capucinus) inhabiting a seasonally dry tropical forest found that the exploitation of embedded or mechanically protected invertebrates was concentrated during periods of fruit scarcity, which suggests that embedded insects are best characterized as a fallback food for capuchina.
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Efficacy of pitfall trapping, Winkler and Berlese extraction methods for measuring ground-dwelling arthropods in moist- deciduous forests in the Western Ghats

TL;DR: Significantly a greater frequency and higher abundance of arthropods belonging to Orthoptera, Blattaria, and Diptera occurred in pitfall-trapped samples and Psocoptera and Acariformes in Berlese-extracted samples than that obtained in the other two methods, indicating that both methods are useful, one complementing the other, eliminating a chance for possible under-representation of taxa in quantitative studies.
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A comparison of the pitfall trap, Winkler extractor and Berlese funnel for sampling ground-dwelling arthropods in tropical montane cloud forests.

TL;DR: Inclusion of floatation method as a complementary method along with the Winkler extractor would enable a comprehensive quantitative survey of ground-dwelling arthropods in tropical montane cloud forests.
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A genet drive-through: are large spotted genets using urban areas for “fast food”? a dietary analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the dietary composition of urban G. tigrina using scat analyses, and the influence of predictable supplementary feeding stations on their feeding behavior in the suburbs of Kloof/Hillcrest, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
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Factors affecting the distribution of large spotted genets (Genetta tigrina) in an urban environment in South Africa

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relationship between occurrence patterns of large spotted genets (Genetta tigrina) with various environmental variables believed to influence their detection and site occupancy in an urban environment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sweep Samples of Tropical Foliage Insects: Effects of Seasons, Vegetation Types, Elevation, Time of Day, and Insularity

Daniel H. Janzen
- 01 May 1973 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the adult beetles, adult bugs, or all arthropods, in sweep samples from Costa Rican secondary vegetation and primary forest understory during night and day, over a 3,340-m elevational transect, during the wet and dry seasons, and from Caribbean Island secondary vegetation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Insect diversity: facts, fiction and speculation*

TL;DR: Assessment of the faunal importance of the canopy in relation to that of other rain forest biotopes requires comparative quantitative studies, and the preliminary results of one such study suggest that over 42 million arthropods may be found in a hectare of Seram rain forest.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tropical rain forest tree growth and atmospheric carbon dynamics linked to interannual temperature variation during 1984-2000

TL;DR: During 1984–2000, canopy tree growth in old-growth tropical rain forest at La Selva, Costa Rica, varied >2-fold among years, which is consistent with decreased net primary production in tropical forests in the warmer years of the last two decades.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differences in Insect Abundance and Diversity Between Wetter and Drier Sites During a Tropical Dry Season

Daniel H. Janzen, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1968 - 
TL;DR: When compared with temperate data on insect communities there are indications that the four tropical communities examined have a much greater number of species and possibly a greater internal uniqueness than similar temperature communities.
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