9 resultados para urban habitats
Resumo:
[ES] El estudio de la flora alóctona en hábitats urbanos está adquiriendo cada vez un mayor interés por parte de la comunidad científica. Este estudio se llevó a cabo en el municipio de Basauri, situado en la provincia de Bizkaia, donde por un lado, se realizó un catálogo de la flora vascular alóctona y por otro, se realizaron muestreos de vegetación en siete hábitats diferentes, con el objetivo de evaluar el nivel de invasión en cada uno de ellos. Se identificaron un total de 50 especies alóctonas (exóticas) en el municipio, la mayor parte de ellas de origen americano, introducidas como ornamentales y que muestran comportamiento invasor. A partir de los datos de los inventarios de vegetación, se estimó que aproximadamente un 18,2% de las especies eran exóticas, entre las que destacan las que pertenecen a las familias Asteraceae, Fabaceae y Poaceae. Además, se observó que los hábitats más invadidos fueron aquellos sometidos a mayores perturbaciones, como los hábitats ruderales y los riparios, también se observó una disminución de la diversidad total de especies con el aumento de la cobertura de especies alóctonas.
Resumo:
283 p. : graf., map.
Resumo:
4 p.
Resumo:
22 p.
Resumo:
33 p.
Resumo:
18 p.
Resumo:
47 p.
Resumo:
Blowflies are insects of forensic interest as they may indicate characteristics of the environment where a body has been laying prior to the discovery. In order to estimate changes in community related to landscape and to assess if blowfly species can be used as indicators of the landscape where a corpse has been decaying, we studied the blowfly community and how it is affected by landscape in a 7,000 km(2) region during a whole year. Using baited traps deployed monthly we collected 28,507 individuals of 10 calliphorid species, 7 of them well represented and distributed in the study area. Multiple Analysis of Variance found changes in abundance between seasons in the 7 analyzed species, and changes related to land use in 4 of them (Calliphora vomitoria, Lucilia ampullacea, L. caesar and L. illustris). Generalised Linear Model analyses of abundance of these species compared with landscape descriptors at different scales found only a clear significant relationship between summer abundance of C. vomitoria and distance to urban areas and degree of urbanisation. This relationship explained more deviance when considering the landscape composition at larger geographical scales (up to 2,500 m around sampling site). For the other species, no clear relationship between land uses and abundance was found, and therefore observed changes in their abundance patterns could be the result of other variables, probably small changes in temperature. Our results suggest that blowfly community composition cannot be used to infer in what kind of landscape a corpse has decayed, at least in highly fragmented habitats, the only exception being the summer abundance of C. vomitoria.
Resumo:
Three new species of Lumbriculidae were collected from floodplain seeps and small streams in southeastern North America. Some of these habitats are naturally acidic. Sylphella puccoon gen. n., sp. n. has prosoporous male ducts in X-XI, and spermathecae in XII-XIII. Muscular, spherical atrial ampullae and acuminate penial sheaths distinguish this monotypic new genus from other lumbriculid genera having similar arrangements of reproductive organs. Cookidrilus pocosinus sp. n. resembles its two subterranean, Palearctic congeners in the arrangement of reproductive organs, but is easily distinguished by the position of the spermathecal pores in front of the chaetae in X-XIII. Stylodrilus coreyi sp. n. differs from congeners having simple-pointed chaetae and elongate atria primarily by the structure of the male duct and the large clusters of prostate cells. Streams and wetlands of Southeastern USA have a remarkably high diversity of endemic lumbriculids, and these poorly-known invertebrates should be considered in conservation efforts.