Cucujus Cinnaberinus
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Niche Partitioning Among Dead Wood-Dependent Beetles
www.nature.com/scientificreports OPEN Niche partitioning among dead wood‑dependent beetles Jakub Horák Niche partitioning among species with virtually the same requirements is a fundamental concept in ecology. Nevertheless, some authors suggest that niches have little involvement in structuring communities. This study was done in the Pardubice Region (Czech Republic) on saproxylic beetles with morphologically similar larvae and very specifc requirements, which are related to their obligatory dependence on dead wood material: Cucujus cinnaberinus, Pyrochroa coccinea, and Schizotus pectinicornis. This work was performed on 232 dead wood pieces at the landscape scale over six years. Based on the factors studied, the relationships among these species indicated that their co‑occurrence based on species presence and absence was low, which indicated niche partitioning. However, based on analyses of habitat requirements and species composition using observed species abundances, there was no strong evidence for niche partitioning at either studied habitat levels, the tree and the microhabitat. The most likely reasons for the lack of strong niche partitioning were that dead wood is a rich resource and co‑occurrence of saproxylic community was not driven by resource competition. This might be consistent with the theory that biodiversity could be controlled by the neutral drift of species abundance. Nevertheless, niche partitioning could be ongoing, meaning that the expanding C. cinnaberinus may have an advantage over the pyrochroids and could dominate in the long term. Te biotic interactions and habitat requirements in terms of abiotic conditions of a species characterize its posi- tion in the ecosystem—i.e., its ecological niche 1. One of the most important questions in ecology is how species interact and how their niches overlap 2. -
Sovraccoperta Fauna Inglese Giusta, Page 1 @ Normalize
Comitato Scientifico per la Fauna d’Italia CHECKLIST AND DISTRIBUTION OF THE ITALIAN FAUNA FAUNA THE ITALIAN AND DISTRIBUTION OF CHECKLIST 10,000 terrestrial and inland water species and inland water 10,000 terrestrial CHECKLIST AND DISTRIBUTION OF THE ITALIAN FAUNA 10,000 terrestrial and inland water species ISBNISBN 88-89230-09-688-89230- 09- 6 Ministero dell’Ambiente 9 778888988889 230091230091 e della Tutela del Territorio e del Mare CH © Copyright 2006 - Comune di Verona ISSN 0392-0097 ISBN 88-89230-09-6 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publishers and of the Authors. Direttore Responsabile Alessandra Aspes CHECKLIST AND DISTRIBUTION OF THE ITALIAN FAUNA 10,000 terrestrial and inland water species Memorie del Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Verona - 2. Serie Sezione Scienze della Vita 17 - 2006 PROMOTING AGENCIES Italian Ministry for Environment and Territory and Sea, Nature Protection Directorate Civic Museum of Natural History of Verona Scientifi c Committee for the Fauna of Italy Calabria University, Department of Ecology EDITORIAL BOARD Aldo Cosentino Alessandro La Posta Augusto Vigna Taglianti Alessandra Aspes Leonardo Latella SCIENTIFIC BOARD Marco Bologna Pietro Brandmayr Eugenio Dupré Alessandro La Posta Leonardo Latella Alessandro Minelli Sandro Ruffo Fabio Stoch Augusto Vigna Taglianti Marzio Zapparoli EDITORS Sandro Ruffo Fabio Stoch DESIGN Riccardo Ricci LAYOUT Riccardo Ricci Zeno Guarienti EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Elisa Giacometti TRANSLATORS Maria Cristina Bruno (1-72, 239-307) Daniel Whitmore (73-238) VOLUME CITATION: Ruffo S., Stoch F. -
A Catalogue of Lithuanian Beetles (Insecta, Coleoptera) 1 Doi: 10.3897/Zookeys.121.732 Catalogue Launched to Accelerate Biodiversity Research
A peer-reviewed open-access journal ZooKeys 121: 1–494 (2011) A catalogue of Lithuanian beetles (Insecta, Coleoptera) 1 doi: 10.3897/zookeys.121.732 CATALOGUE www.zookeys.org Launched to accelerate biodiversity research A catalogue of Lithuanian beetles (Insecta, Coleoptera) Vytautas Tamutis1, Brigita Tamutė1,2, Romas Ferenca1,3 1 Kaunas T. Ivanauskas Zoological Museum, Laisvės al. 106, LT-44253 Kaunas, Lithuania 2 Department of Biology, Vytautas Magnus University, Vileikos 8, LT-44404 Kaunas, Lithuania 3 Nature Research Centre, Institute of Ecology, Akademijos 2, LT-08412 Vilnius, Lithuania Corresponding author: Vytautas Tamutis ([email protected]) Academic editor: Lyubomir Penev | Received 6 November 2010 | Accepted 17 May 2011 | Published 5 August 2011 Citation: Tamutis V, Tamutė B, Ferenca R (2011) A catalogue of Lithuanian beetles (Insecta, Coleoptera). ZooKeys 121: 1–494. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.121.732 Abstract This paper presents the first complete and updated list of all 3597 species of beetles (Insecta: Coleop- tera) belonging to 92 families found and published in Lithuania until 2011, with comments also pro- vided on the main systematic and nomenclatural changes since the last monograic treatment (Pileckis and Monsevičius 1995, 1997). The introductory section provides a general overview of the main features of territory of the Lithuania, the origins and formation of the beetle fauna and their conservation, the faunistic investigations in Lithuania to date revealing the most important stages of the faunistic research process with reference to the most prominent scientists, an overview of their work, and their contribution to Lithuanian coleopteran faunal research. Species recorded in Lithuania by some authors without reliable evidence and requiring further confir- mation with new data are presented in a separate list, consisting of 183 species. -
Strasbourg, 19 April 2013
Strasbourg, 25 October 2013 T-PVS (2013) 17 [tpvs17e_2013.doc] CONVENTION ON THE CONSERVATION OF EUROPEAN WILDLIFE AND NATURAL HABITATS Group of Experts on the Conservation of Invertebrates Tirana, Albania 23-24 September 2013 ---ooOoo--- REPORT Document prepared by the Directorate of Democratic Governance This document will not be distributed at the meeting. Please bring this copy. Ce document ne sera plus distribué en réunion. Prière de vous munir de cet exemplaire. T-PVS (2013) 17 - 2 - CONTENTS 1. Meeting report ................................................................................................................................... 3 2. Appendix 1: Agenda .......................................................................................................................... 6 3. Appendix 2: List of participants ........................................................................................................ 9 4. Appendix 3: Compilation of National Reports .................................................................................. 10 5. Appendix 4: Draft Recommendation on threats by neurotoxic insecticides to pollinators ................ 75 * * * The Standing Committee is invited to: 1. Take note of the report of the meeting; 2. Thank the Albanian government for the efficient preparation of the meeting and the excellent hospitality; 3. Continue with Bern Convention engagement with invertebrate conservation issues by further encouraging and monitoring national implementation of European Strategy for the Conservation -
The LIFE Project “Monitoring of Insects with Public
ISSN 1314-3301 (online) ISSN 1314-6947 (print) Nature Conservation 20 Nature European Workshop A peer-reviewed open-access journal 24th – 26th May 2017, Mantova – ITALY 2017 Launched to accelerate biodiversity conservation Edited by Edited GUIDELINES FOR THE MONITORING OF THE SAPROXYLIC BEETLES PROTECTED IN EUROPE IN PROTECTED BEETLES THE SAPROXYLIC OF THE MONITORING FOR GUIDELINES Conference for managers of Italian reserves GUIDELINES FOR 29th May 2017, Mantova - ITALY Giuseppe M. Carpaneto, Paolo Audisio, Marco A. Bologna, Pio F. Roversi, Franco Mason Franco Roversi, F. A. Bologna, Pio Marco Audisio, M. Carpaneto, Paolo Giuseppe THE MONITORING OF THE SAPROXYLIC BEETLES PROTECTED IN EUROPE EDITED BY GIUSEPPE M. CARPANETO, PAOLO AUDISIO, MARCO A. BOLOGNA, PIO F. ROVERSI, FRANCO MASON Coordinating beneficiary: Comando Unità per la Tutela Forestale, Ambientale e Agroalimentare. Arma dei Carabinieri. Centro Nazionale Biodiversità Forestale Carabinieri "Bosco Fontana" Mantova - Verona Italy The journal Nature Conservation was established within the framework of the European Union's Framework Program 7 large-integrated project SCALES: Securing the Conservation of biodiversity across Administrative Levels and spatial, LIFE11 NAT/IT/000252 temporal, and Ecological Scales, www.scales-project.net Monitoring of insects with public participation With the contribution of the LIFE financial instrument of the European Union 20 2017 Special Issue http://natureconservation.pensoft.net ! http://natureconservation.pensoft.net A peer-reviewed open-access journal AUTHOR GUIDELINES Electronic Journal Articles: Mallet • Zoobank (www.zoobank.org), Authors are kindly requested to sub- J, Willmott K (2002) Taxonomy: • Morphbank (www.morphbank.net), mit their manuscript only through the renaissance or Tower of Babel? • Genbank (www.ncbi.nlm.nih. -
Cucujidae) Is Rapidly Colonising Northern Belgium
ISSN 1374-8297 Bulletin S.R.B.E. / K.B.V.E. 156 (2020) Bulletin de la Société royale belge d’Entomologie / Bulletin van de Koninklijke Belgische Vereniging voor Entomologie, 156 (2020): 162–172 Cucujus cinnaberinus (Cucujidae) is rapidly colonising Northern Belgium Arno THOMAES1, Luc CRÈVECOEUR2, Gibson DAKA3, Mario DE BLOCK4, Vincent FIEVET5, Rens HEYNDRICKX6, Kennedy KARIUKI3, Roel LAMMERANT7, Seppe MARCHAND8, Kevin SCHEERS1, Vincent SMEEKENS1 & Peter VAN DE KERCKHOVE1 1 Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO), Havenlaan 88 bus 73, B-1000 Brussels, Belgium (e-mail: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]) 2 Kennipstraat 37, 3600 Genk, Belgium (e-mail: [email protected]) 3 Internship student at ANB/INBO, University of Antwerp, Universiteitsplein 1, 2610 Wilrijk, Belgium 4 Nature and Forests (ANB), Havenlaan 88 bus 75, B-1000 Brussels, Belgium (e-mail: [email protected]) 5 Service public de Wallonie - agriculture ressources naturelles et environnement – Département de l’Etude du Milieu naturel et agricole (DEMNA) – Direction de la Nature et de l’Eau (DNE), Av. Maréchal Juin, 23, B- 5030 Gembloux, Belgium (e-mail: [email protected]) 6 Berkenrodelei 18, 2660 Hoboken, Belgium (e-mail: [email protected]) 7 Uppsala University (EBC), Norbyvägen 14: Uppsala, Sweden (e-mail: [email protected]) 8 Internship student at INBO, University of Leuven, Kasteelpark Arenberg 31, 3001 Leuven, Belgium Abstract Till ten years ago, Cucujus cinnaberinus (Scopoli, 1763) was largely restricted to Eastern Europe and Scandinavia and likely extinct in entire Western Europe. In 2014, the first observation was done in Belgium. -
Habitat Preferences Influencing Populations, Distribution and Conservation of the Endangered Saproxylic Beetle Cucujus Cinnaberi
Eur. J. Entomol. 107: 81–88, 2010 http://www.eje.cz/scripts/viewabstract.php?abstract=1512 ISSN 1210-5759 (print), 1802-8829 (online) Habitat preferences influencing populations, distribution and conservation of the endangered saproxylic beetle Cucujus cinnaberinus (Coleoptera: Cucujidae) at the landscape level JAKUB HORÁK1, 2, EVA VÁVROVÁ1 and KAREL CHOBOT 3 1Department of Biodiversity Indicators, Silva Tarouca Research Institute for Landscape and Ornamental Gardening, KvČtnové námČstí 391, CZ-252 43 PrĤhonice, Czech Republic; e-mail: [email protected] 2 Department of Ecology, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences in Prague, Kamýcká 1176, CZ-165 21 Prague 6, Czech Republic 3Agency for Nature Conservation and Landscape Protection of the Czech Republic, Nuselská 39, CZ-140 00 Prague 4, Czech Republic Key words. Coleoptera, Cucujidae, Cucujus cinnaberinus, dead wood, fragmentation, Natura 2000, man-made habitats, conservation Abstract. Cucujus cinnaberinus (Scopoli, 1763) is a saproxylic beetle listed in the IUCN Red List and the European Habitats Direc- tive. Although the species is highly protected and often red-listed little is known about its ecological requirements and status of its populations. Therefore, our main aims were to review its current and historical distributions and status of C. cinnaberinus popula- tions in Europe and to determine its recent habitat preferences at the landscape level in the Czech Republic, where the increasing number of records over the last few years indicates a possible increase in abundance of this beetle. Cucujus cinnaberinus is closely associated with soft-wood and broad leaved trees and is able to colonize man-made habitats from persisting local populations if there is a sufficient supply of suitable dead wood. -
Groupe D'experts Sur La Conservation Des Invertébrés
Strasbourg, 15 July 2008 T-PVS (2008) 6 [tpvs06e_2008] CONVENTION ON THE CONSERVATION OF EUROPEAN WILDLIFE AND NATURAL HABITATS Group of Experts on the Conservation of Invertebrates Kongsvold Mountain Lodge, Norway 23-25 June 2008 ---ooOoo--- DRAFT REPORT Document prepared by the Directorate of Culture and Cultural and Natural Heritage This document will not be distri buted at the meeting. Please bri ng this copy. Ce document ne sera plus distribué en réunion. Prièr e de vous munir de cet exe mplaire. T-PVS (2008) 6 - 2 - The Standing Committee is invited to: 1. Take note of the report of the meeting; 2. Thank the Norwegian government and in particular, the Museum of Natural History and Archaeology, in Trondheim, and the Directorate for Nature Management, for the efficient preparation of the meeting and the excellent hospitality; and 3. Take note of the activities proposed by the Group for its future work. - 3 - T-PVS (2008) 6 CONTENTS 1. Meeting report ..........................................................................................................................4 2. Appendix 1: List of participants .................................................................................................8 3. Appendix 2: Agenda .................................................................................................................11 4. Appendix 3: National reports .....................................................................................................13 5. Appendix 4: Report of the Seminar on “Systems of knowledge -
Large-Scale Habitat Model Reveals a Key Role of Large Trees and Protected Areas in the Metapopulation Survival of the Saproxylic
Biodiversity and Conservation (2019) 28:3851–3871 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-019-01854-0 ORIGINAL PAPER Large‑scale habitat model reveals a key role of large trees and protected areas in the metapopulation survival of the saproxylic specialist Cucujus cinnaberinus Michał Bełcik1 · Jakub Goczał2 · Michał Ciach3 Received: 19 December 2018 / Revised: 26 August 2019 / Accepted: 11 September 2019 / Published online: 18 September 2019 © The Author(s) 2019 Abstract Deforestation for agricultural purposes and logging over centuries has resulted in a signif- cant loss of forest cover and the deep structural and functional simplifcation of persistent European woodlands, which has led to a large-scale decline in biodiversity. Despite recent reforestation eforts in many regions of Europe, populations of numerous forest species remain unrecovered. Due to the loss of ecological continuity and the simplifcation of the ecosystem structure and functionality, the value of secondary forests in sustaining habitat specialists is being questioned. Here, we build a large-scale habitat suitability model to predict the current potential of forests to host populations of the fagship European saprox- ylic beetle Cucujus cinnaberinus. Our maximum entropy model revealed that the distribu- tion of suitable habitats strongly corresponds to the occurrence of large and well-preserved forest complexes that are characterized by an ecological continuity of the stands. Among the analysed environmental variables, the mean tree diameter and distance to protected areas were the most important suitable habitat contributors. The optimum habitats were identifed almost exclusively within some parts of the Carpathians and the northeastern part of the country, particularly in the Białowieża Forest, which include the best preserved European forests. -
– 115 – on the Mass Occurrence of Two Rare Saproxylic Beetles, Cucujus Cinnaberinus (Cucujidae) and Dircaea Australis (Mela
ON THE MASS OCCURRENCE OF TWO RARE SAPROXYLIC BEETLES, CUCUJUS CINNABERINUS (CUCUJIDAE) AND DIRCAEA AUSTRALIS (MELANDRYIDAE), IN SOUTH MORAVIAN FLOODPLAIN FORESTS 1* 1 1 Jiří SCHLAGHAMERSKÝ , Vítězslav MAŇÁK & Petr ČECHOVSKÝ RÉSUMÉ. — Sur l’occurrence massive de deux espèces rares de coléoptères saproxyliques Cucujus cinnaberinus (Cucujidae) et Dircaea australis (Melandryidae) dans les forêts alluviales du sud de la Mora- vie. — De 2003 à 2005 les coléoptères saproxyliques ont été étudiés à l’aide de pièges à interception dans trois vieilles formations de forêt pluviale, à dominance de chêne pédonculé et de frêne à feuilles étroites, près de la confl uence de la Morava et de la Dyje dans le sud de la Moravie (République Tchèque). Sur cha- que site 10 pièges ont été placés durant deux saisons du dernier tiers d’avril ou du début mai jusqu’à la fi n septembre ou la mi-octobre. L’analyse des captures est en cours. Les présents résultats s’appuient sur deux saisons à Dlúhý hrúd et dans la réserve naturelle nationale de Ranšpurk mais sur une seule saison dans la réserve naturelle nationale de Cahnov-Soutok. Le piégeage a donné des nombres remarquablement élevés, respectivement 10 et 63 spécimens, de deux espèces saproxyliques rares et menacées, Cucujus cinnaberinus et Dircea australis. Les premières données sur D. australis dans cette région et donc pour la République Tchèque datent des années 1990. C. cinnaberinus a été capturé de la seconde moitié de mai à la première moitié d’août, essentiellement à partir de juillet. Mots-clés: Coléoptères, bois mort, xylobiotique, pièges à interception, forêt alluviale. -
Action Plan for the Conservation of the Danube Clouded Yellow Colias Myrmidone in the European Union
Action Plan for the Conservation of the Danube Clouded Yellow Colias myrmidone in the European Union final draft (13/4/2012) EUROPEAN COMMISSION, 2012 THE N2K GROUP European Economic Interest Group Compilers: Pavel Marhoul (Daphne/N2K Group, Czech Republic), Matthias Dolek (Büro Geyer und Dolek, Germany) List of contributors Jiří Beneš, Institute of Entomology, Biology Centre, ASCR, v.v.i., České Budějovice, Czech Republic Stoyan Beshkov, National Museum of Natural History, Sofia, Bulgaria Karel Chobot, Agency for Nature Conservation and Landscape Protection, Czech Republic Andrei Crisan, Romania Sylvain Cuvelier, Belgium Ionut Iorgu, “Grigore Antipa” National Museum of Natural History, Romania Matjaž Jež, Institute of the Republic of Slovenia for Nature Conservation, RU Maribor, Slovenia Henrik Kalivoda, Institute of Landscape Ecology, Slovakia Martin Konvička, Institute of Entomology, Biology Centre, ASCR, v.v.i., České Budějovice, Czech Republic Ábrahám Levente, Somogy County Museums, Hungary Attila Mesterházy, University of West Hungary, Hungary Szabolcs Sáfián, Hungarian Natural Heritage Trust, Hungary Martina Šašić, Croatian Natural History Museum, Croatia, Butterfly Conservation Europe Marcin Sielezniew, Institute of Biology, University of Bialystok/TOM - Association for Butterfly Conservation, Poland Simon Spencer, British Butterfly Conservation, European Interest Group, Great Britain Andrej Štangler, State Nature Conservancy, PLA Biele Karpaty, Slovakia Chris van Swaay, Butterfly Conservation Europe István Szentirmai, Őrség National Park Directorate, Hungary Ildikó Varga, Ministry of Environment, Hungary Lubomíra Vávrová, Slovakia Lubomír Víťaz, Slovakia Rudi Verovnik, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia Martin Warren, Butterfly Conservation Europe Lifespan of plan/Reviews Recommended citation including ISBN Cover photo: Ľ. Víťaz (Slovakia) Acknowledgements for help and support: Dr. Helmut Höttinger (Austria), Dr. Levente Szekely, Dorel M. -
Coleoptera: Cucujidae) from South America, with a Checklist of Flat Bark Beetles from the Continent
Biodiversity Data Journal 9: e62576 doi: 10.3897/BDJ.9.e62576 Taxonomic Paper First records of the Palaestes abruptus Sharp, 1899 and P. nicaraguae Sharp, 1899 (Coleoptera: Cucujidae) from South America, with a checklist of flat bark beetles from the continent Radomir Jaskuła‡, Marek Michalski§, John W. M. Marris| ‡ Department of Invertebrate Zoology and Hydrobiology, Faculty of Biology and Environmental Protection, University of Lodz, Łódź, Poland § Department of Experimental Zoology and Evolutionary Biology, Faculty of Biology and Environmental Protection, University of Lodz, Łódź, Poland | Entomology Research Collection, Bio-Protection Research Centre, Lincoln University, Christchurch, New Zealand Corresponding author: Radomir Jaskuła ([email protected]) Academic editor: Yasen Mutafchiev Received: 29 Dec 2020 | Accepted: 04 Feb 2021 | Published: 17 Feb 2021 Citation: Jaskuła R, Michalski M, Marris JWM (2021) First records of the Palaestes abruptus Sharp, 1899 and P. nicaraguae Sharp, 1899 (Coleoptera: Cucujidae) from South America, with a checklist of flat bark beetles from the continent. Biodiversity Data Journal 9: e62576. https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.9.e62576 Abstract Background The flat bark beetles (Coleoptera: Cucujidae) is a small insect family with only about 70 species. Most of the species are distributed in Holarctic, Oriental and/or Australasian realms, while in South America, only six species have been recorded, including a single one known from Peru. New information Two cucujid beetle species, Palaestes abruptus Sharp, 1899 and P. nicaraguae Sharp, 1899, are recorded from South America for the first time. The species are recorded from the Pasco (P. abruptus) and Cusco and Junín (P. nicaraguae) Regions of Peru, based, in © Jaskuła R et al.