Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Arthropod communities of insular (São Miguel Island, Azores) and mainland (Portugal) coastal grasslands

View through CrossRef
The data presented here is part of a doctoral project aimed at characterising and comparing arthropod diversity across biotic communities in coastal ecosystems. The present work provides an inventory of the arthropods recorded in two coastal grasslands ecosystems: the Portugal mainland and the Azores. Sampling was conducted on São Miguel Island (Azores Archipelago) as well as in the Sesimbra and Sines regions (Setúbal District, mainland Portugal). Thirty-one plots were set and visited four times, in spring and summer of 2022. The specimens collected were sorted and catalogued into a total of 534 arthropod species and morphospecies. In total, 67 species were common to both ecosystems. A total of 13,515 specimens were counted in the two coastal grasslands. We registered three new records for the Azores (in São Miguel Island), all being exotic: Aritranis director (Thumberg, 1822) (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae), Draeculacephala bradleyi, Van Duzee, 1915 (Hemiptera, Cicadellidae) and Isodontia sp. Patton, 1880 (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). This publication demonstrates the importance of coastal grasslands as reservoirs for some potentially invasive arthropod species.
Title: Arthropod communities of insular (São Miguel Island, Azores) and mainland (Portugal) coastal grasslands
Description:
The data presented here is part of a doctoral project aimed at characterising and comparing arthropod diversity across biotic communities in coastal ecosystems.
The present work provides an inventory of the arthropods recorded in two coastal grasslands ecosystems: the Portugal mainland and the Azores.
Sampling was conducted on São Miguel Island (Azores Archipelago) as well as in the Sesimbra and Sines regions (Setúbal District, mainland Portugal).
Thirty-one plots were set and visited four times, in spring and summer of 2022.
The specimens collected were sorted and catalogued into a total of 534 arthropod species and morphospecies.
In total, 67 species were common to both ecosystems.
A total of 13,515 specimens were counted in the two coastal grasslands.
We registered three new records for the Azores (in São Miguel Island), all being exotic: Aritranis director (Thumberg, 1822) (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae), Draeculacephala bradleyi, Van Duzee, 1915 (Hemiptera, Cicadellidae) and Isodontia sp.
Patton, 1880 (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae).
This publication demonstrates the importance of coastal grasslands as reservoirs for some potentially invasive arthropod species.

Related Results

Water relations of an insular pit viper
Water relations of an insular pit viper
Colonization of novel habitats often requires plasticity or adaptation to local conditions. There is a critical need to maintain hydration in terrestrial environments having limite...
Evaluation of dryland forage species for lowland Marlborough and 'Mid Canterbury
Evaluation of dryland forage species for lowland Marlborough and 'Mid Canterbury
Grazing trials were established at Dashwood, Marlborough and at Winchmore Research Station, Mid Canterbury, to determine persistence, production patterns and changes in composition...
Coastal grassland vegetation records from São Miguel Island (Azores) and Mainland Portugal
Coastal grassland vegetation records from São Miguel Island (Azores) and Mainland Portugal
The present work provides an inventory of the plant species recorded in two distinct coastal grasslands ecosystems: the Azores Archipelago (São Miguel Island) and Portug...
The effects of temporal continuities of grasslands on the diversity and species composition of plants
The effects of temporal continuities of grasslands on the diversity and species composition of plants
Abstract Semi-natural grasslands are ecosystems rich in biodiversity. However, their decline has been reported worldwide, and identification of grasslands with high...
New (and old) aspects of the island syndrome in plants on New Zealand’s outlying islands
New (and old) aspects of the island syndrome in plants on New Zealand’s outlying islands
For reasons not fully understood, plant communities on islands differ predictably from mainland ones. For example, plants with herbaceous relatives on the mainland are often woody ...
Arthropod diversity in two Historic Gardens in the Azores, Portugal
Arthropod diversity in two Historic Gardens in the Azores, Portugal
The aim of our study was to characterise and compare the richness and composition of endemic, native (non-endemic) and introduced arthropod assemblages of two Azorean Historic Gard...
Burden of the Beast
Burden of the Beast
Introduction Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, and its fluctuating waves of infections and the emergence of new variants, Indigenous populations in Australia and worldwide have re...
COASTAL ENGINEERING 2000
COASTAL ENGINEERING 2000
*** Available Only Through ASCE *** http://ascelibrary.aip.org/browse/asce/vol_title.jsp?scode=C This Proceedings contains more than 300 papers pre...

Back to Top