2021
DOI: 10.32870/dugesiana.v28i1.7142
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Distribución vertical y estacional de coleópteros (Coleoptera) en un bosque artificial de un área de conservación afectada por la urbanización en el centro de México

Abstract: Se estudió la diversidad vertical y estacional de los coleópteros en un bosque artificial en el centro de México. Los muestreos se realizaron mensualmente durante un año, usando trampas de intercepción de vuelo colocadas a diferentes alturas (1 m y 5 m) y trampas pitfall (0 m). Se obtuvo un total de 456 individuos agrupados en 31 familias y 126 morfoespecies. Se registró mayor riqueza y abundancia a 1 m, y los valores inferiores a nivel del suelo. La diversidad fue significativamente mayor en el dosel a 5 m qu… Show more

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“…Thus, the Journal of Insect Biodiversity and Systematics 2024  10 (2) low vegetation coverage in our habitat with a dominant plant species (LH) gives its soils little humidity and greater exposure to high temperatures and erosion. This poses a problem for scarabaeids, carabids, staphylinids, and tenebrionids (Chung et al, 2000;Medina-Reyes et al, 2021) whose life cycles occur in the soil (Lescano et al, 2017). As a result, habitats dominated by Aloysia salsoloides support a different community of beetles, with a highly dominant species of Bruchidae, a constituent of the phytophagous guild, which is undoubtedly highly specialised to exploit a specific plant resource of those extreme environments.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the Journal of Insect Biodiversity and Systematics 2024  10 (2) low vegetation coverage in our habitat with a dominant plant species (LH) gives its soils little humidity and greater exposure to high temperatures and erosion. This poses a problem for scarabaeids, carabids, staphylinids, and tenebrionids (Chung et al, 2000;Medina-Reyes et al, 2021) whose life cycles occur in the soil (Lescano et al, 2017). As a result, habitats dominated by Aloysia salsoloides support a different community of beetles, with a highly dominant species of Bruchidae, a constituent of the phytophagous guild, which is undoubtedly highly specialised to exploit a specific plant resource of those extreme environments.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%