Artigo

Diversity of the families of Coleoptera captured with pitfall traps in five different environments in Santa Maria, RS, Brazil

The conservationist community is giving special attention to epigean insects due to their importance in the preservation of terrestrial habitats. This work analysed the diversity, richness, abundance and similarity at the soil surface of Coleoptera composition among five environments: native forest,...

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Autor principal: Fagundes, Camila Kurzmann
Outros Autores: Di Mare, Rocco Alfredo, Wink, Charlote, Manfio, Daiara
Grau: Artigo
Idioma: pt_BR
Publicado em: Revista Brasileira de Biologia 2020
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16202
id oai:repositorio:1-16202
recordtype dspace
spelling oai:repositorio:1-16202 Diversity of the families of Coleoptera captured with pitfall traps in five different environments in Santa Maria, RS, Brazil Diversidade de Coleoptera em cinco differentes ambientes no sul do Brasil Fagundes, Camila Kurzmann Di Mare, Rocco Alfredo Wink, Charlote Manfio, Daiara Animals Beetle Biodiversity Biomass Brasil Classification Population Density Soil Tree Animal Beetles Biodiversity Biomass Brasil Population Density Soil Trees Coleoptera Eucalyptus Eucalyptus Saligna Hexapoda Nitidulidae Pinus Elliottii Scarabaeidae The conservationist community is giving special attention to epigean insects due to their importance in the preservation of terrestrial habitats. This work analysed the diversity, richness, abundance and similarity at the soil surface of Coleoptera composition among five environments: native forest, native grassland, Pinus elliottii plantation, Eucalyptus saligna plantation and degraded area by soil use in southern Brazil, from October 2004 to October 2005. A total of 1,812 individuals were collected, attributed to 45 morph-species and 14 families. The higher richness and abundance were observed in native forest (31 species and 782 individuals) and the lower richness and abundance in degraded area (14 species, 86 individuals). Scarabaeidae was the richest family captured, with nine morph-species, and the most frequent family was Nitidulidae (1,113 individuals). According to the Shannon-Wiener index, the degraded area had smaller diversity in relation to the native forest, E. saligna and Pinus elliottii plantations. No difference in diversity between evaluated areas was found for the Simpson diversity index. The most dominant site was the degraded. The correlation between the total number of morph-species captured was not different to the degraded area and the P. elliottii monoculture (r = 0.47) and the correlation between the total individuals number was not significant between native forest and native grassland (r = 0.46) and between degraded areas and the other sites. According to the Jaccard Similarity Index, the greatest similarity for the organism composition occurred between P. elliottii plantation and E. saligna plantation, presenting 74% of overlap. 2020-05-31T18:05:41Z 2020-05-31T18:05:41Z 2011 Artigo https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16202 10.1590/S1519-69842011000300007 pt_BR Volume 71, Número 2, Pags. 381-390 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Brazil http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/br/ application/pdf Revista Brasileira de Biologia
institution Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia - Repositório Institucional
collection INPA-RI
language pt_BR
topic Animals
Beetle
Biodiversity
Biomass
Brasil
Classification
Population Density
Soil
Tree
Animal
Beetles
Biodiversity
Biomass
Brasil
Population Density
Soil
Trees
Coleoptera
Eucalyptus
Eucalyptus Saligna
Hexapoda
Nitidulidae
Pinus Elliottii
Scarabaeidae
spellingShingle Animals
Beetle
Biodiversity
Biomass
Brasil
Classification
Population Density
Soil
Tree
Animal
Beetles
Biodiversity
Biomass
Brasil
Population Density
Soil
Trees
Coleoptera
Eucalyptus
Eucalyptus Saligna
Hexapoda
Nitidulidae
Pinus Elliottii
Scarabaeidae
Fagundes, Camila Kurzmann
Diversity of the families of Coleoptera captured with pitfall traps in five different environments in Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
topic_facet Animals
Beetle
Biodiversity
Biomass
Brasil
Classification
Population Density
Soil
Tree
Animal
Beetles
Biodiversity
Biomass
Brasil
Population Density
Soil
Trees
Coleoptera
Eucalyptus
Eucalyptus Saligna
Hexapoda
Nitidulidae
Pinus Elliottii
Scarabaeidae
description The conservationist community is giving special attention to epigean insects due to their importance in the preservation of terrestrial habitats. This work analysed the diversity, richness, abundance and similarity at the soil surface of Coleoptera composition among five environments: native forest, native grassland, Pinus elliottii plantation, Eucalyptus saligna plantation and degraded area by soil use in southern Brazil, from October 2004 to October 2005. A total of 1,812 individuals were collected, attributed to 45 morph-species and 14 families. The higher richness and abundance were observed in native forest (31 species and 782 individuals) and the lower richness and abundance in degraded area (14 species, 86 individuals). Scarabaeidae was the richest family captured, with nine morph-species, and the most frequent family was Nitidulidae (1,113 individuals). According to the Shannon-Wiener index, the degraded area had smaller diversity in relation to the native forest, E. saligna and Pinus elliottii plantations. No difference in diversity between evaluated areas was found for the Simpson diversity index. The most dominant site was the degraded. The correlation between the total number of morph-species captured was not different to the degraded area and the P. elliottii monoculture (r = 0.47) and the correlation between the total individuals number was not significant between native forest and native grassland (r = 0.46) and between degraded areas and the other sites. According to the Jaccard Similarity Index, the greatest similarity for the organism composition occurred between P. elliottii plantation and E. saligna plantation, presenting 74% of overlap.
format Artigo
author Fagundes, Camila Kurzmann
author2 Di Mare, Rocco Alfredo
Wink, Charlote
Manfio, Daiara
author2Str Di Mare, Rocco Alfredo
Wink, Charlote
Manfio, Daiara
title Diversity of the families of Coleoptera captured with pitfall traps in five different environments in Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
title_short Diversity of the families of Coleoptera captured with pitfall traps in five different environments in Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
title_full Diversity of the families of Coleoptera captured with pitfall traps in five different environments in Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
title_fullStr Diversity of the families of Coleoptera captured with pitfall traps in five different environments in Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Diversity of the families of Coleoptera captured with pitfall traps in five different environments in Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
title_sort diversity of the families of coleoptera captured with pitfall traps in five different environments in santa maria, rs, brazil
publisher Revista Brasileira de Biologia
publishDate 2020
url https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16202
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score 11.755432