Search results for "Diplopoda"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Distribution, diversity patterns and faunogenesis of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of the Himalayas

2018

The Himalayas support a highly rich, diverse, multi-layered, mostly endemic diplopod fauna which presently contains >270 species, 53 genera, 23 families and 13 orders. This is the result of mixing the ancient, apparently Tertiary and younger, Plio-Pleistocene elements of various origins, as well as the most recent anthropochore (= man-mediated) introductions. At the species and, partly, generic levels, the fauna is largely autochthonous and sylvicolous, formed through aboundingin situradiation and vicariance events. In general, the species from large genera and families tend to occupy a wide range of altitudes, but nearly each of the constituent species shows a distribution highly lo…

0106 biological sciencesSympatryAsiaArthropodaRange (biology)Fauna010607 zoologyDistribution (economics)010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDiplopodalcsh:ZoologyVicariancefaunisticsAnimalialcsh:QL1-991Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsbusiness.industryEcologyPlio-PleistocenePalaearcticGeographyPlio-PleistoceneAnimal Science and ZoologybusinessResearch Article
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Data from: Functional responses of multi-taxa communities to disturbance and stress gradients in a restored floodplain

2015

1. Trait-based approaches can reveal the mechanisms through which disturbances or stress impact communities, allowing comparisons of the role of different mechanisms in shaping communities among taxonomic groups. Such information can lead to higher comparability, transferability and predictability of the outcome of restoration projects. However, multitaxa trait-based approaches were rarely used in the context of ecosystem restoration. 2. We investigated the responses to environmental gradients of seven taxa (vascular plants, staphylinid and carabid beetles, spiders, isopods, diplopods and earthworms) in a restored floodplain using a species traits approach. We assessed the impact of flood d…

Annelidacommunity weighted mean of traitsLife SciencesearthwormsStaphylinidaeriparian ecosystemsmedicine and health carespecies traitsDiplopodaAraneaecosystem functionsMedicineCarabidaePlantaeArthropodsIsopoda
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Chilocoris capensis n. sp., the first species of the genus Chilocoris Mayr, 1865 (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae) recorded in the Republic of South…

2016

Chilocoris capensis n. sp. collected from fallen ripe figs of broom cluster fig Ficus sur Forsskal, 1775, the first burrower bug species of the genus Chilocoris Mayr, 1865 recorded in the Republic of South Africa, is described and compared with Chilocoris laevicollis Horvath, 1919, the morphologically most closely allied Afrotropical species. Additionally, an annotated checklist of burrower bug species recorded in the Republic of South Africa is provided. The known biology of Afrotropical Chilocoris species is briefly summarized.

MaleInsectaArthropodaburrower bugsbroom cluster figFicusDalodesmidaeHemipteraHeteropterataxonomySouth AfricaDiplopodamorphologyAnimaliaAnimalsCydnidaeFicus surEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFicus surEcosystemnew speciesbiologyEcologyBroomHeteropteraBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationFicusHemipteraChecklistPolydesmidaAnimal Science and ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)FemaleCape figCydnidaeAfrotropicsZootaxa
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