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      Life Cycle and Secondary Production of Four Species from Functional Feeding Groups in a Tropical Stream of South India

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      International Journal of Zoology
      Hindawi Limited

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          Abstract

          This study focused on life strategies of species from functional feeding groups (FFGs) found in a tropical stream of the Sirumalai hills, South India. We examined the life cycle and secondary production of species of shredders ( Lepidostoma nuburagangai), scrapers ( Baetissp.), collectors ( Choroterpes alagarensis), and predators ( Neoperla biseriata). In addition, we studied the assemblage structure of functional feeding groups. We found the collectors occupied the highest percentage, followed in turn by scrapers, predators, and shredders. The diversity of FFGs was higher at riffle areas and assemblage with stream substrates differing in each functional group. An asynchronous life cycle was observed for Baetis, C. alagarensis, and N. biseriata, while L. nuburagangaiwas found in four to five generations per year. We acquired data on secondary production of scraper species of Baetis, which reached the highest values among all investigated species. This observation stresses the importance of scrapers as playing a key role in converting coarse particulate organic matter to fine particulate organic matter with low or high abundances of shredder population and maintaining the food chain in tropical streams.

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          Geographic Analysis of Thermal Equilibria: A Conceptual Model for Evaluating the Effect of Natural and Modified Thermal Regimes on Aquatic Insect Communities

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            Biodiversity of stream insects: variation at local, basin, and regional scales.

            We review the major conceptual developments that have occurred over the last 50 years concerning the factors that influence insect biodiversity in streams and examine how well empirical descriptions and theory match. Stream insects appear to respond to both spatial and temporal variation in physical heterogeneity. At all spatial scales, the data largely support the idea that physical complexity promotes biological richness, although exceptions to this relationship were found. These exceptions may be related to how we measure habitat complexity at finer spatial scales and to factors that influence regional richness, such as biogeographic history, at broader spatial scales. However, the degree to which local stream insect assemblages are influenced by regional processes is largely unknown.
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              Trophic Levels and Functional Feeding Groups of Macroinvertebrates in Neotropical Streams

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Zoology
                International Journal of Zoology
                Hindawi Limited
                1687-8477
                1687-8485
                2014
                2014
                : 2014
                :
                : 1-8
                Article
                10.1155/2014/191059
                42fde6dc-6247-4c80-817d-6ce1bcb4cfde
                © 2014

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

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