The effect of latitudinal gradient on the species diversity of Chinese litter-dwelling thrips

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Abstract

To understand the global distribution patterns of litter-dwelling thrips, a total 150 leaf litter samples were collected from 6 natural reserves located in three climatic regions, temperate, subtropical and tropical. Te results showed the relative abundance of Tysanoptera was over 3.0% in 4 natural reserves from subtropical and tropical zone, and reached 5.9% in one tropical reserve, only less than Acarina and Collembola. In contrast it was only 0.3% in the warm temperate natural reserves, and no thrips were collected in a mid temperate reserve. Te order on the average species numbers per plot of litter thrips was tropic > subtrop-ics > temperate (n=25, p<0.05). Mean density of litter thrips per plots in the tropics and subtropics was significantly higher than that in the temperate region (n=25, p<0.05), but the average density was not significantly different between tropical and subtropical zones (n=25, p>0.05). Te diversity of litter thrips in the tropics and subtropics was much higher than that in the temperate area based on comparsions of Shannon-Wiener diversity index (H '), Pielou eveness index (J), and Simpson dominance index (D). All of these results indicated that litter-dwelling thrips lived mainly in tropical and subtropical regions; meanwhile, species number and relative abundance increased with decreasing latitude. © Jun Wang et al.

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Wang, J., Tong, X., & Wu, D. (2014). The effect of latitudinal gradient on the species diversity of Chinese litter-dwelling thrips. ZooKeys, (417), 9–20. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.417.7895

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