2006
DOI: 10.1590/s0085-56262006000100013
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As borboletas (Lepidoptera, Papilionoidea) do Distrito Federal, Brasil

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Cited by 61 publications
(48 citation statements)
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References 7 publications
(8 reference statements)
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“…In this study Nymphalidae was the richest family, similar to data obtained in studies conducted in Santa Maria (Dessuy and Morais 2007;Sack and Morais 2008), Espinilho State Park and surrounding area (Marchiori and Romanowski 2006), Maquiné (Iserhard and Romanowski 2004), Minas Gerais (Silva et al 2007) and Distrito Federal (Emery et al 2006). The most abundant subfamilies of Nymphalidae were Nymphalinae (n = 319) and Heliconiinae (n = 300), similar to data obtained by Quadros et al (2004) in the Coastal Plain of Rio Grande do Sul.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 87%
“…In this study Nymphalidae was the richest family, similar to data obtained in studies conducted in Santa Maria (Dessuy and Morais 2007;Sack and Morais 2008), Espinilho State Park and surrounding area (Marchiori and Romanowski 2006), Maquiné (Iserhard and Romanowski 2004), Minas Gerais (Silva et al 2007) and Distrito Federal (Emery et al 2006). The most abundant subfamilies of Nymphalidae were Nymphalinae (n = 319) and Heliconiinae (n = 300), similar to data obtained by Quadros et al (2004) in the Coastal Plain of Rio Grande do Sul.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Pieridae and Papilionidae are the families with lowest species richness in Brazil (Emery et al 2006, Francini et al 2011, and our findings corroborate this pattern. Most captured species of Pieridae and Papilionidae are considered widely distributed throughout the country and characteristic of modified habitats (Emery et al 2006, Zacca et al 2011, Morais et al 2012, suggesting that the study areas have been harmed by anthropic influences.…”
Section: Taxonomic Compositionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…It is known that species richness is strongly dependent on sampling effort, partially explaining the lowest richness in our short-term survey when compared to our expeditions and long-term surveys. The influence of sampling effort on species richness is also observed when we compare our total richness (189 species) to intensively sampled areas in the Amazon, such as Rondônia (843) (Emmel & Austin 1990), Parque Nacional del Manu, in Peru (1,300) (Robbins et al 1996) and Parque Estadual do Chandless, Acre (482) (Mielke et al 2010), and Cerrado sites, such as Distrito Federal (504) (Emery et al 2006). Comparing our results with those from other biomes, such as the Atlantic forest, one of the most well inventoried biomes regarding butterflies in Brazil (Santos et al 2008), we observe higher richness in several sites of the later, which shelter from 218 to 914 species (Brown Jr & Freitas 2000, Francini et al 2011).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 71%
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“…No presente estudo, as duas fitofisionomias estudadas compreendem formações totalmente diferentes (mata e campo), influenciando a temperatura, umidade e luminosidade, fator que poderia explicar a diferença entre a abundância de borboletas frugívoras nestes locais. De acordo com Pinheiro & Ortiz (1992) e Emery et al (2006), a variedade de fitofisionomias do Cerrado provém uma grande heterogeneidade ambiental que proporciona uma variação espacial de distribuição de uma enorme variedade de borboletas, pois são encontrados microambientes propícios a uma ampla gama de espécies.…”
Section: (Tabela 1)unclassified