18 results on '"Winkler extractor"'
Search Results
2. Two New Reports of Stigmatomma Roger, 1859 (Hymenoptera, Formicidae, Amblyoponinae) Species from the Indian Subcontinent
- Author
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R. Sahanashree, Punnath Aswaj, Marathe Aniruddha, and Dharma Rajan Priyadarsanan
- Subjects
Northeast India ,Winkler extractor ,Dracula Ants ,Arunachal Pradesh ,Himalayas ,Zoology ,QL1-991 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 ,Natural history (General) ,QH1-278.5 - Abstract
Two species of Stigmatomma Roger, 1859, namely Stigmatomma amblyops Karavaiev, 1935 and Stigmatomma luyiae Hsu, Esteves, Chou & Lin, 2017 are reported for the first time from the Indian subcontinent. Stigmatomma amblyops was previously known from Vietnam and China whereas S. luyiae was recorded from Taiwan. Workers of the aforementioned species were collected from the Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary, Arunachal Pradesh, Northeast India.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Sampling techniques and environmental variables influence the distribution of pseudoscorpions in urban forest fragments in the central Amazon
- Author
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Juliana Souza ARAÚJO and Jorge Luiz Pereira SOUZA
- Subjects
Berlese funnel ,biodiversity surveys ,entomological umbrella ,tropical rain forest ,invertebrates ,Winkler extractor ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
ABSTRACT The growth of urban landscapes has genarally reduced biodiversity worldwide. Invertebrates have explored different environments, and it usually takes different sampling techniques to get a representative sample of the species assemblage in a given location. Some studies have sought to determine the minimum necessary number of sampling techniques, including ecological relationships or costs to guide the sampling protocol. In the Amazon, the effect of soil characteristics on invertebrate distribution is well known. We evaluated if sampling techniques have a complementary effect on the detection of pseudoscorpion assemblages and tested whether environmental variables affect the distribution of pseudoscorpion species. The study sites were two urban forest fragments in the city of Manaus, in the central Amazon. In each fragment, we sampled 20 palm trees using the beating technique, and installed transects with 12 sampling points for collection of soil and litter samples for extraction of arthropods in a Berlese funnel and a Winkler extractor, respectively. We collected 267 individuals of 11 species of pseudoscorpions. Most records were obtained through the Winkler extraction in both fragments. The assemblage from the palm trees was different from that in the edaphic samples. Pseudoscorpion species composition also differed significantly between soil and litter, and was influenced by potassium concentration. The number of species in the fragments and the environmental effect on the distribution of pseudoscorpions was similar to that recorded in environmental protection areas, evidencing that urban forest fragments can serve as an efficient repository of Amazonian pseudoscorpion biodiversity.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Impacts of rubber plantations on community assembly of ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae): a case study from monsoonal tropics of Xishuangbanna, southwest China.
- Author
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ALCANTARA, Mark Jun M., MODI, Shrushti, LING, Tial C., MONKAI, Jutamart, He XU, Shuyin HUANG, and Akihiro NAKAMURA
- Subjects
RUBBER plantations ,ANTS ,ANT communities ,FOREST biodiversity ,HABITATS ,HYMENOPTERA ,TREE farms ,HABITAT modification - Abstract
Rubber plantation has become one of the most dominant human-modified landscape features in continental Southeast Asia. Xishuangbanna, a monsoonal tropical region of southern Yunnan in China, is a hotspot of rubber cultivation and represents the northern margins of rubber expansion in Asia. Here, we compared the species richness, beta diversity patterns, and assemblage composition of ants from a rubber plantation and two forest types (alluvial and limestone forest) common in Xishuangbanna. We hypothesized that species richness is higher in forest habitats than the rubber plantation. Due to habitat similarities between the limestone forest and the rubber plantation (tree defoliation, dry condition, thinner soil), we hypothesized that ant assemblages in these habitats are similar, and beta diversity is driven by nestedness. We found the highest ant species richness in the alluvial forest, followed by the limestone forest and rubber plantation. Ant assemblages were similar between alluvial and limestone forests but different in the rubber plantation. Beta diversity estimation showed that beta diversity patterns were driven by species turnover in all three habitats. Our results showed that the rubber plantation was species-poor and harbored unique ant assemblages compared to forest habitats. Moreover, the assemblages in the rubber plantation were often dominated by numerically dominant and aggressive taxa. Our study highlights: biodiversity changes associated with forest conversion into monoculture rubber plantations; the conservation value of limestone forests, a common yet understudied forest type in Southeast Asia; and the importance of considering species identities when determining the impacts of habitat modification on ant diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
5. Sampling efficiency of pitfall traps and Winkler extractor for inventory of the harvestmen (Arachnida: Opilionidae)
- Author
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RALUCA IOANA BĂNCILĂ and RODICA PLĂIAŞU
- Subjects
opiliones ,pitfall traps ,winkler extractor ,relative abundance ,species richness ,species composition ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Most soil and leaf litter invertebrates lack efficient inventory methods. We evaluated the efficiency of the pitfall traps (or Barber method) and Winkler extractor (or Winkler method) in a beech forest on limestone in southwestern Romania using harvestmen (Arachnida: Opilionidae) as target group. The aim was to test if the relative abundance, species richness and species composition differ between the two methods
- Published
- 2009
6. Diversidade de espécies dos gêneros de Crematogaster, Gnamptogenys e Pachycondyla (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) e complementaridade dos métodos de coleta durante a estação seca numa estação ecológica no estado do Pará, Brasil Diversity of species of the genera Crematogaster,Gnamptogenys and Pachycondyla, (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and complementarity of sampling methods during the dry season in an ecological station in the Brazilian state of Pará
- Author
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Jorge Luiz Pereira Souza, C.A.R. Moura, Ana Y. Harada, and Elizabeth Franklin
- Subjects
Formigas ,extrator de Winkler ,armadilha de fosso ,Pittfall ,Amazonia ,Ants ,Winkler extractor ,Pitfall traps ,Amazon ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
As formigas são muito usadas em programas de inventários e monitoramentos, resultando em grande quantidade de material coletado com vários métodos, limitações financeiras e na falta de taxonomos para vários táxons. Para contribuir na elaboração de protocolos alternativos, analisamos a complementaridade de dois métodos de amostragem na detecção da riqueza de espécies. Em seis parcelas de 1 km² distribuídas em 33.000 ha de floresta primária, investigamos a diversidade e a freqüência das espécies de Crematogaster,Gnamptogenys e Pachycondyla, como parte do protocolo de formigas de serapilheira do Projeto TEAM. Em cada parcela, quatro transectos de 100 m foram instalados. Dez sub-amostras foram efetuadas por transecto, usando extrator de Winkler e armadilha de fosso. Registramos 36 espécies, sendo 15 novos registros para o Pará e 29 para a área de estudo. Dezessete espécies foram comuns aos dois métodos, onze foram capturadas com armadilhas de fosso e oito com Winkler. As proporções de espécies representadas por um indivíduo ("singletons") foram altas para ambos os métodos (> 0,4). Dezenove espécies foram coletadas por apenas um método e três foram representadas por apenas um indivíduo em cada método. A análise de ordenação (escalonamento multidimensional semi-híbrido) revelou diferenças na estrutura das comunidades de formigas obtidas pelos dois métodos de amostragem. Houve um efeito de complementaridade entre os dois métodos para a obtenção de um levantamento mais completo da riqueza de espécies, significando que ambos devem ser usados no protocolo. Outros recursos, como a rarefação e/ou diluição das amostras são recursos a serem avaliados em futuras investigações.Ants are largely used for monitoring and inventory programs, resulting in great amounts of material sampled with several methodologies, financial limitations and lack of experts to do the taxonomy of many taxa. To contribute for the elaboration of alternative protocols, we analyzed the complementarity of two sampling methods in the detection of species richness. In 6 plots of 1 km² distributed in an area of 33,000 ha of continuous primary forest, in the Brazilian state of Pará, the diversity and the frequency of species of genera Crematogaster,Gnamptogenys and Pachycondyla were investigated, as part of the "Ant methodology Protocol" of the Project TEAM. Using the Winkler extractor and pitfall traps, 10 sub-samples were collected per transect. In each plot, 4 transects of 100 m were installed. We registered 36 species, and 15 are new records for the state, and 29 for the study site. Seventeen species were common to both sampling methods, 11 were captured with pitfall and 8 with Winkler. The proportions of singletons were high for both methods (>0,4). Nineteen species were captured by only one method and three were represented by only one individual in both methods. Ordination analysis (SSH, Semi-Strong Hybrid Multi-Dimensional Scaling) indicated differences in community structure between both sampling methods. There was a complementarity's effect between these two methods in order to obtain a more complete inventory of the species richness, indicating that both must be used in the protocol. Other resources like rarefaction and/or sample dilution must be evaluated in future investigations.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Riqueza de formigas (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) da serapilheira em fragmentos de floresta semidecídua da Mata Atlântica na região do Alto do Rio Grande, MG, Brasil Litter ants richness (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) in remnants of a semi-deciduous forest in the Atlantic rain forest, Alto do Rio Grande region, Minas Gerais, Brazil
- Author
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Mônica S. Santos, Júlio N. C. Louzada, Nívia Dias, Ronald Zanetti, Jacques H. C. Delabie, and Ivan C. Nascimento
- Subjects
Fragmentos ,extrator de Winkler ,Formicidae ,diversidade ,comunidade ,Fragments ,Winkler extractor ,diversity ,community ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
As comunidades de Formicidae (Insecta, Hymenoptera) foram estudadas em fragmentos de floresta semidecídua inseridos no bioma Mata Atlântica medindo de 2,99 a 45,5 ha na região do Alto do Rio Grande, Minas Gerais, Brasil. As formigas foram coletadas em 15 amostras de serapilheira de 1 m² em cada fragmento, usando o método de extrator de Winkler. Cada amostra teve distância mínima de 50 m uma da outra. Um total de 142 espécies de formigas foi distribuído entre 40 gêneros, 23 tribos e 10 subfamílias. As comunidades amostradas mostraram uma alta riqueza e altos valores no índice de diversidade. O tamanho da área dos fragmentos não influenciou na riqueza de espécies de formigas.The community of Formicidae (Insecta, Hymenoptera) in semideciduous seasonal forest of the Atlantic rain forest biome was studied in remnants ranging from 2.99 to 45.45 ha, in the region of the Alto do Rio Grande, Minas Gerais State, Brazil. The ants collected in 15 samples of litter of one square meter each, using Winkler extractors method, in each forest fragment. Each sample were taken at intervals of 50 meters. A total of 142 species of ants, were distributed into 40 genera, 23 tribes and 10 subfamilies. The communities showed a high richness and diversity indices values. The size of the fragments did not influence the ant richness.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. First record of the rarely collected ant Protanilla gengma Xu, 2012 (Hymenoptera, Formicidae, Leptanillinae) from the Indian subcontinent
- Author
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Aswaj, Punnath, Anoop, Karunakaran, and Priyadarsanan, Dharma Rajan
- Subjects
Indian ant fauna ,Eastern Himalayas ,Northeast India ,Winkler extractor ,Mizoram - Abstract
Protanilla gengma Xu, 2012 is recorded for the first time from the Indian subcontinent. This rarely collected ant species was previously known only from Yunnan Province, China. Two workers of P. gengma were collected from the Lengteng Wildlife Sanctuary, Mizoram, Northeast India, using the Winkler extraction method. This find also represents the first record of the subfamily Leptanillinae from Northeast India and the third species of the genus Protanilla Taylor, 1990 from India. We present an updated distribution map for the genus and comment on morphological variation of the worker caste of P. gengma.
- Published
- 2020
9. Efeito de iscas formicidas granuladas sobre a biodiversidade de mirmecofauna não alvo em serapilheira de eucalipto.
- Author
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De Nadai Corassa, Janaína, Cristiane Magistrali, Iris, Candido Moreno, Jorge, Bisognin Cantarelli, Edison, and Corassa, Anderson
- Subjects
- *
ANTS , *ENTOMOLOGY , *FOREST protection , *PESTICIDES , *EUCALYPTUS - Abstract
The effect of systematic use of granulated bait for leaf-cutting ants control was assessed on a community of non-target ants in eucalyptus in the municipality of Vera, Mato Grosso State, Brazil. The ants were collected using the Winkler extractors, in 50 samples of 1 m2 of litter in each stage: eight days before the distribution of baits, eight days after the distribution of baits and subsequently each month, totaling 13 collections. Each sample were taken at distances of 50 meters from each other. Copies of ants were assembled via dry, labeled and identified in genus and species level. The analysis of the residual effect was conducted by comparing the number of individuals and species over the months. A total of 273 ants were distributed into nine genera, four subfamilies and 13 species. It was found that diversity index at the end of the study period did not return to initial levels observed before treatment with the ant, suggesting that the active ingredient in bait alters the patterns of diversity pre-existing, causing adverse impact on non-target myrmecofauna. This is the first work in this region and serves as support for future studies on ant diversity in leaf litter of Eucalyptus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
10. Shuflling Leaf Litter Samples Produces More Accurate and Precise Snapshots of Terrestrial Arthropod Community Composition.
- Author
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GuéNard, Benoit and Lucky, Andrea
- Subjects
LEAF diseases & pests ,ARTHROPOD pests ,ARTHROPODA ,ANTS ,BEETLES - Abstract
Copyright of Environmental Entomology is the property of Oxford University Press / USA and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Araneofauna de serrapilheira em um fragmento de Mata Atlântica do nordeste brasileiro: estudo comparativo entre dois métodos de coleta.
- Author
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Carvalho, Danielle Mendes, Lima Peres, Marcelo Cesar, Dias, Marcelo Alves, Requião Queiroz, Maria Carolina, and Ferreira, Tiago Trindade
- Subjects
SPIDERS ,ARACHNIDA ,SPECIES ,HABITATS ,ORGANISMS ,RAIN forests ,ANIMAL traps - Abstract
Copyright of Neotropical Biology & Conservation is the property of Pensoft Publishers and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Quantitative extraction of macro-invertebrates from temperate and tropical leaf litter and soil: efficiency and time-dependent taxonomic biases of the Winkler extraction
- Author
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Krell, Frank-Thorsten, Chung, Arthur Y.C., DeBoise, Emma, Eggleton, Paul, Giusti, Alessandro, Inward, Kelly, and Krell-Westerwalbesloh, Sylvia
- Subjects
- *
INVERTEBRATES , *SOILS , *TAXONOMY , *CLASSIFICATION - Abstract
Summary: Winkler extractors, a simple device presumed to extract macro-invertebrates efficiently from soil and litter samples, is being used increasingly in ecological surveys and functional studies of soil macro-invertebrate communities. In this study the extraction efficiency and taxonomic bias of the Winkler extraction are evaluated for extraction periods of 3h up to 7 weeks, calibrated by hand-sorting after 7 weeks. The method extracts most macro-invertebrates completely or to a proportion of over 90% except Isopoda, Diplopoda and Mollusca. However, for an exhaustive result, a long extraction period of several weeks is necessary. For the most speciose group (adult beetles) and for the commonly most abundant group (ants), a short extraction of 3 days was sufficient to get 70% of the individuals and nearly all species. Three days was also sufficient to recover the rank abundance order of beetle families, while for ‘higher taxa’ and for Chilopoda species, 4 and 3 weeks were necessary, respectively. Optimum extraction times for the abundant macro-invertebrate groups and possible adjustment factors for the soil macro-invertebrates of temperate woodlands are proposed to compensate the taxonomic bias caused by short extraction periods. However, for recording an accurate snapshot of the soil and litter fauna at a particular time, shorter extraction periods are advisable because of the short life cycle of many soil invertebrates causing emergence of later stages or a second generation during longer extraction periods. The problem of contamination of samples is also discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Teste da regra de equivalência energética para formigas de serapilheira: efeitos de diferentes métodos de estimativa de abundância em floresta ombrófila
- Author
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Jarbas Marçal Queiroz, Antonio José Mayhé-Nunes, Elaine F. Ramos, Guilherme O. Souza, and André Barbosa Vargas
- Subjects
Ecology ,pitfall ,Rainforest ,Biology ,Winkler extractor ,Equivalence rule ,Extractor ,Habitat ,Abundance (ecology) ,tamanho corporal ,Insect Science ,Macroecologia ,extrator de Winkler ,Litter ,Species richness ,Macroecology ,body size ,Tropical rainforest - Abstract
A regra de equivalência energética (REE) propõe que o uso de energia independe do tamanho corporal da espécie. O tamanho e a abundância de formigas da serapilheira, coletadas em floresta ombrófila usando armadilhas pitfall e extrator de Winkler, foram usados no teste da REE. Os dados de abundância obtidos da extração de Winkler confirmaram a REE, enquanto os dados provenientes das armadilhas pitfall rejeitaram. A combinação das abundâncias estimadas pelas duas técnicas tanto aceitou quanto rejeitou a REE. Estudos posteriores deveriam focar a interação entre a técnica de coleta e o tipo de habitat no teste da REE para comunidades de formigas. The Energetic Equivalence Rule (EER) states that species tend to consume energy independent of their body size. Here, the EER was tested for litter ants using body size and abundance data. Rainforest ants were obtained using pitfall traps and Winkler extractor. The abundance data from the Winkler extractions confirmed the EER, while the pitfall traps rejected it. Combination of abundance from pitfall catches and Winkler extractions either confirmed or rejected the EER. Further studies should focus on the interaction between sampling techniques and habitat types in the test of EER for ant communities.
- Published
- 2009
14. Sampling efficiency of pitfall traps and Winkler extractor for inventory of harvestmen (Arachnida: Opilionidae)
- Author
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Rodica Plăiaşu and Raluca Ioana Băncilă
- Subjects
pitfall traps ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,species composition ,relative abundance ,species richness ,Winkler extractor ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Most soil and leaf litter invertebrates lack efficient inventory methods. We evaluated the efficiency of the pitfall traps (or Barber method) and Winkler extractor (or Winkler method) in a beech forest on limestone in southwestern Romania using harvestmen (Arachnida: Opilionidae) as target group. The aim was to test if the relative abundance, species richness and species composition differ between the two methods. The harvestmen relative abundance and species richness were different when assessed by the two sampling methods. Winkler extractor captured greater numbers of harvestmen than pitfall traps, whereas pitfall traps caught more harvestmen species. Harvestmen assemblages as determined by Winkler method were found to be more similar with natural harvestmen assemblages. If the aim of the study is to analyse the community patterns Winkler extractor could be more efficient then pitfall traps. Our study suggests that the choice of the sampling method should be applied depending on the type of the investigation.
- Published
- 2009
15. Diversity of species of the genera Crematogaster, Gnamptogenys and Pachycondyla, (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and complementarity of sampling methods during the dry season in an ecological station in the Brazilian state of Pará
- Author
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Ana Yoshi Harada, Elizabeth Franklin, C.A.R Moura, and Jorge Luiz Pereira Souza
- Subjects
Biology ,armadilha de fosso ,Amazonia ,Transect ,Amazon ,Pittfall ,Pitfall traps ,geography ,Pachycondyla ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ants ,Ecology ,Community structure ,Winkler extractor ,biology.organism_classification ,Old-growth forest ,Hymenoptera ,Pará - Brasil ,Formigas ,Amazônia ,Taxon ,Gnamptogenys ,extrator de Winkler ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Ordination ,Crematogaster ,Species richness ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Abstract
As formigas são muito usadas em programas de inventários e monitoramentos, resultando em grande quantidade de material coletado com vários métodos, limitações financeiras e na falta de taxonomos para vários táxons. Para contribuir na elaboração de protocolos alternativos, analisamos a complementaridade de dois métodos de amostragem na detecção da riqueza de espécies. Em seis parcelas de 1 km² distribuídas em 33.000 ha de floresta primária, investigamos a diversidade e a freqüência das espécies de Crematogaster,Gnamptogenys e Pachycondyla, como parte do protocolo de formigas de serapilheira do Projeto TEAM. Em cada parcela, quatro transectos de 100 m foram instalados. Dez sub-amostras foram efetuadas por transecto, usando extrator de Winkler e armadilha de fosso. Registramos 36 espécies, sendo 15 novos registros para o Pará e 29 para a área de estudo. Dezessete espécies foram comuns aos dois métodos, onze foram capturadas com armadilhas de fosso e oito com Winkler. As proporções de espécies representadas por um indivíduo ("singletons") foram altas para ambos os métodos (> 0,4). Dezenove espécies foram coletadas por apenas um método e três foram representadas por apenas um indivíduo em cada método. A análise de ordenação (escalonamento multidimensional semi-híbrido) revelou diferenças na estrutura das comunidades de formigas obtidas pelos dois métodos de amostragem. Houve um efeito de complementaridade entre os dois métodos para a obtenção de um levantamento mais completo da riqueza de espécies, significando que ambos devem ser usados no protocolo. Outros recursos, como a rarefação e/ou diluição das amostras são recursos a serem avaliados em futuras investigações. Ants are largely used for monitoring and inventory programs, resulting in great amounts of material sampled with several methodologies, financial limitations and lack of experts to do the taxonomy of many taxa. To contribute for the elaboration of alternative protocols, we analyzed the complementarity of two sampling methods in the detection of species richness. In 6 plots of 1 km² distributed in an area of 33,000 ha of continuous primary forest, in the Brazilian state of Pará, the diversity and the frequency of species of genera Crematogaster,Gnamptogenys and Pachycondyla were investigated, as part of the "Ant methodology Protocol" of the Project TEAM. Using the Winkler extractor and pitfall traps, 10 sub-samples were collected per transect. In each plot, 4 transects of 100 m were installed. We registered 36 species, and 15 are new records for the state, and 29 for the study site. Seventeen species were common to both sampling methods, 11 were captured with pitfall and 8 with Winkler. The proportions of singletons were high for both methods (>0,4). Nineteen species were captured by only one method and three were represented by only one individual in both methods. Ordination analysis (SSH, Semi-Strong Hybrid Multi-Dimensional Scaling) indicated differences in community structure between both sampling methods. There was a complementarity's effect between these two methods in order to obtain a more complete inventory of the species richness, indicating that both must be used in the protocol. Other resources like rarefaction and/or sample dilution must be evaluated in future investigations.
- Published
- 2007
16. Effect of formicid granulated baits on non-target ants biodiversity in eucalyptus plantations litter
- Author
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Corassa, Janaína De Nadai, Magistrali, Iris Cristiane, Moreno, Jorge Candido, Cantarelli, Edison Bisognin, and Corassa, Anderson
- Subjects
forest protection ,fungi ,entomologia ,extrator de Winkler ,food and beverages ,entomology ,Winkler extractor ,inseticida ,human activities ,Formicidae ,proteção florestal ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,pesticide - Abstract
The effect of systematic use of granulated bait for leaf-cutting ants control was assessed on a community of non-target ants in eucalyptus in the municipality of Vera, Mato Grosso State, Brazil. The ants were collected using the Winkler extractors, in 50 samples of 1 m2 of litter in each stage: eight days before the distribution of baits, eight days after the distribution of baits and subsequently each month, totaling 13 collections. Each sample were taken at distances of 50 meters from each other. Copies of ants were assembled via dry, labeled and identified in genus and species level. The analysis of the residual effect was conducted by comparing the number of individuals and species over the months. A total of 273 ants were distributed into nine genera, four subfamilies and 13 species. It was found that diversity index at the end of the study period did not return to initial levels observed before treatment with the ant, suggesting that the active ingredient in bait alters the patterns of diversity pre-existing, causing adverse impact on non-target myrmecofauna. This is the first work in this region and serves as support for future studies on ant diversity in leaf litter of Eucalyptus., Avaliou-se o efeito do uso sistemático de iscas granuladas destinadas ao controle de formigas cortadeiras sobre a comunidade de formigas não-alvo da serapilheira em eucaliptais do município de Vera, Mato Grosso. As formigas foram coletadas, usando o método de extrator de Winkler, em 50 amostras de 1m² de serapilheira, em cada uma das fases: oito dias antes da distribuição das iscas, oito dias depois da distribuição das iscas e posteriormente a cada mês, totalizando 13 coletas. Cada amostra teve distância mínima de 50 m uma da outra. Os exemplares de formicídeos foram montados via seco, etiquetados e identificados em nível de gênero e de espécie. A análise do efeito residual foi realizada pelo comparativo do número de indivíduos e espécies ao longo dos meses. Um total de 273 formigas foi distribuído entre nove gêneros, quatro subfamílias e treze espécies. Constatou-se que o índice de diversidade ao final do período de estudo não voltou aos níveis iniciais encontrados antes do tratamento com o formicida, sugerindo que o princípio ativo da isca formicida altera os padrões de diversidade pré-existentes, causando impacto negativo na mirmecofauna não alvo. Este é o primeiro trabalho realizado na região e serve como subsídio para trabalhos futuros sobre diversidade de formigas em serapilheira de eucaliptos. Effect of formicid granulated baits on non-target antsbiodiversity in eucalyptus plantations litterAbstractThe effect of systematic use of granulated bait for leaf-cutting ants control was assessed on acommunity of non-target ants in eucalyptus in the municipality of Vera, Mato Grosso State, Brazil.The ants were collected using the Winkler extractors, in 50 samples of 1 m2 of litter in each stage:eight days before the distribution of baits, eight days after the distribution of baits and subsequentlyeach month, totaling 13 collections. Each sample were taken at distances of 50 meters from eachother. Copies of ants were assembled via dry, labeled and identified in genus and species level.The analysis of the residual effect was conducted by comparing the number of individuals andspecies over the months. A total of 273 ants were distributed into nine genera, four subfamilies and13 species. It was found that diversity index at the end of the study period did not return to initiallevels observed before treatment with the ant, suggesting that the active ingredient in bait altersthe patterns of diversity pre-existing, causing adverse impact on non-target myrmecofauna. Thisis the first work in this region and serves as support for future studies on ant diversity in leaf litter ofEucalyptus.
- Published
- 2013
17. Efeito de iscas formicidas granuladas sobre a biodiversidade de mirmecofauna não alvo em serapilheira de eucalipto
- Author
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Nadai Corassa, Janaína De, Cristiane Magistrali, Iris, Candido Moreno, Jorge, Bisognin Cantarelli, Edison, Corassa, Anderson, Nadai Corassa, Janaína De, Cristiane Magistrali, Iris, Candido Moreno, Jorge, Bisognin Cantarelli, Edison, and Corassa, Anderson
- Abstract
The effect of systematic use of granulated bait for leaf-cutting ants control was assessed on a community of non-target ants in eucalyptus in the municipality of Vera, Mato Grosso State, Brazil. The ants were collected using the Winkler extractors, in 50 samples of 1 m2 of litter in each stage: eight days before the distribution of baits, eight days after the distribution of baits and subsequently each month, totaling 13 collections. Each sample were taken at distances of 50 meters from each other. Copies of ants were assembled via dry, labeled and identified in genus and species level. The analysis of the residual effect was conducted by comparing the number of individuals and species over the months. A total of 273 ants were distributed into nine genera, four subfamilies and 13 species. It was found that diversity index at the end of the study period did not return to initial levels observed before treatment with the ant, suggesting that the active ingredient in bait alters the patterns of diversity pre-existing, causing adverse impact on non-target myrmecofauna. This is the first work in this region and serves as support for future studies on ant diversity in leaf litter of Eucalyptus., Avaliou-se o efeito do uso sistemático de iscas granuladas destinadas ao controle de formigas cortadeiras sobre a comunidade de formigas não-alvo da serapilheira em eucaliptais do município de Vera, Mato Grosso. As formigas foram coletadas, usando o método de extrator de Winkler, em 50 amostras de 1m² de serapilheira, em cada uma das fases: oito dias antes da distribuição das iscas, oito dias depois da distribuição das iscas e posteriormente a cada mês, totalizando 13 coletas. Cada amostra teve distância mínima de 50 m uma da outra. Os exemplares de formicídeos foram montados via seco, etiquetados e identificados em nível de gênero e de espécie. A análise do efeito residual foi realizada pelo comparativo do número de indivíduos e espécies ao longo dos meses. Um total de 273 formigas foi distribuído entre nove gêneros, quatro subfamílias e treze espécies. Constatou-se que o índice de diversidade ao final do período de estudo não voltou aos níveis iniciais encontrados antes do tratamento com o formicida, sugerindo que o princípio ativo da isca formicida altera os padrões de diversidade pré-existentes, causando impacto negativo na mirmecofauna não alvo. Este é o primeiro trabalho realizado na região e serve como subsídio para trabalhos futuros sobre diversidade de formigas em serapilheira de eucaliptos
- Published
- 2013
18. Avaliação de três métodos para amostragem de formigas do solo no Cerrado brasileiro
- Author
-
Cauê T. Lopes and Heraldo L. Vasconcelos
- Subjects
Fauna ,Biome ,Biology ,isca ,Animals ,armadilha de solo ,Ecosystem ,pitfall trap ,Formicidae ,Ants ,Ecology ,Sampling (statistics) ,Vegetation ,Plants ,Winkler extractor ,Ant inventory ,Pitfall trap ,Habitat ,bait ,Insect Science ,extrator de Winkler ,Litter ,Entomology ,Brazil ,Inventário de formigas - Abstract
Few studies have evaluated the efficiency of methods for sampling ants, especially in regions with highly variable vegetation physiognomies such as the Cerrado region of central Brazil. Here we compared three methods to collect ground-dwelling ants: pitfall traps, sardine baits, and the Winkler litter extractor. Our aim was to determine which method would be most appropriate to characterize the ant assemblages inhabiting different vegetation types. More species were collected with pitfall traps and with the Winkler extractor than with sardine baits. Pitfall traps collected more species in the cerrado (savanna) physiognomies, particularly in those with a poor litter cover, whereas the Winlker extractor was more efficient in the forest physiognomies, except the one subject to periodic inundations. There was a low similarity in species composition between forest and cerrado physiognomies, and this pattern was detected regardless of the method used to sampling ants. Therefore, even the use of a single, relatively selective method of collection can be enough for studies comparing highly distinct habitats and/or conditions. However, if the purpose of the sampling is to produce a more thoroughly inventory of the ant fauna, we suggest the use of a combination of methods, particularly pitfall traps and the Winkler extractor. Therefore, the Ants of the Leaf-Litter (ALL) Sampling Protocol appear to be an adequate protocol for sampling ants in the highly-threatened Brazilian cerrado biome. Poucos estudos avaliaram a eficiência de métodos para a coleta de formigas, especialmente em regiões com fisionomias vegetais bastante variáveis como a do Cerrado. Neste trabalho, foram comparados três métodos para a coleta de formigas do solo: armadilhas de solo, iscas de sardinha e o extrator de serapilheira de Winkler, com o objetivo de determinar o mais apropriado para caracterizar as assembléias de formigas associadas a diferentes tipos de vegetação. Mais espécies foram coletadas com armadilhas de solo e com o extrator de Winkler do que com iscas. As armadilhas de solo coletaram mais espécies nas fisionomias de cerrado (savânicas), particularmente naquelas com pobre cobertura de serapilheira, enquanto o extrator de Winkler foi mais eficiente nas fisionomias florestais, com exceção daquela sujeita a inundações periódicas. Houve baixa similaridade na composição de espécies entre as fisionomias de cerrado e florestais, e esse padrão foi observado com qualquer dos três métodos de coleta. Portanto, mesmo o uso de um único método pode ser suficiente em estudos que comparam condições ou hábitats bastante distintos. Entretanto, se o propósito da amostragem for produzir um inventário mais completo, sugerimos o uso de uma combinação de métodos, em particular as armadilhas de solo e o extrator de Winkler. Desse modo, o Protocolo para Amostragem de Formigas da Serapilheira (ALL Protocol) parece ser adequado para a amostragem de formigas na ameaçada região do Bioma Cerrado.
- Published
- 2008
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