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      Do arthropod assemblages fit the grassland and savanna biomes of South Africa?

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          Abstract

          The long-standing tradition of classifying South Africa's biogeographical area into biomes is commonly linked to vegetation structure and climate. Because arthropod communities are often governed by both these factors, it can be expected that arthropod communities would fit the biomes. To test this hypothesis, we considered how well arthropod species assemblages fit South Africa's grassy biomes. Arthropod assemblages were sampled from six localities across the grassland and savanna biomes by means of suction sampling, to determine whether the two biomes have distinctive arthropod assemblages. Arthropod samples of these biomes clustered separately in multidimensional scaling analyses. Within biomes, arthropod assemblages were more distinctive for savanna localities than grassland. Arthropod samples of the two biomes clustered together when trophic groups were considered separately, suggesting some similarity in functional assemblages. Dissimilarity was greatest between biomes for phytophagous and predacious trophic groups, with most pronounced differentiation between biomes at sub-escarpment localities. Our results indicate that different arthropod assemblages do fit the grassy biomes to some extent, but the pattern is not as clear as it is for plant species. SIGNIFICANCE: • Provides the first comparison of arthropod composition between grassland and savanna biomes of South Africa. • Explores whether these two biomes show distinct arthropod assemblages. • Documents the characteristics of arthropod assemblages. • Confirms that plant assemblages of biomes are more distinguishable than arthropod assemblages.

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          Canonical correspondence analysis and related multivariate methods in aquatic ecology

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            Terrestrial insects along elevation gradients: species and community responses to altitude.

            The literature on the response of insect species to the changing environments experienced along altitudinal gradients is diverse and widely dispersed. There is a growing awareness that such responses may serve as analogues for climate warming effects occurring at a particular fixed altitude or latitude over time. This review seeks, therefore, to synthesise information on the responses of insects and allied groups to increasing altitude and provide a platform for future research. It focuses on those functional aspects of insect biology that show positive or negative reaction to altitudinal changes but avoids emphasising adaptation to high altitude per se. Reactions can be direct, with insect characteristics or performance responding to changing environmental parameters, or they can be indirect and mediated through the insect's interaction with other organisms. These organisms include the host plant in the case of herbivorous insects, and also competitor species, specific parasitoids, predators and pathogens. The manner in which these various factors individually and collectively influence the morphology, behaviour, ecophysiology, growth and development, survival, reproduction, and spatial distribution of insect species is considered in detail. Resultant patterns in the abundance of individual species populations and of community species richness are examined. Attempts are made throughout to provide mechanistic explanations of trends and to place each topic, where appropriate, into the broader theoretical context by appropriate reference to key literature. The paper concludes by considering how montane insect species will respond to climate warming.
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              The Phylogenetic Study of Adaptive Zones: Has Phytophagy Promoted Insect Diversification?

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                sajs
                South African Journal of Science
                S. Afr. j. sci.
                Academy of Science of South Africa
                1996-7489
                October 2016
                : 112
                : 9-10
                : 1-10
                Affiliations
                [1 ] North-West University South Africa
                Article
                S0038-23532016000500014
                10.17159/sajs.2016/20150424
                e9002993-bf37-4e8a-aba7-1707eccdff11

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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                Product

                SciELO South Africa

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=0038-2353&lng=en
                Categories
                Biology
                Humanities, Multidisciplinary

                General life sciences
                species distribution,arthropod trophic groups,cluster analysis,biome-specificity,arthropod species composition

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