Diptera
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2020.1871522 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A387D1-2151-FFE4-09C7-3498EFF3FB75 |
treatment provided by |
Marcus |
scientific name |
Diptera |
status |
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Diptera View in CoL View at ENA
We extracted 620 Diptera larvae and pupae from 34 of our 251 total phytotelmata samples. These larvae were identified to an estimated 22 morphospecies in 5 families of pleisiomorphic Diptera hereafter called ‘Nematocera’, two families of aquatic Brachycera, and one group of undetermined aquatic Brachycera families ( Table 2). We use a morphospecies concept here but some of these may be distinct species; the systematics of juvenile stages of Diptera in the Neotropics does not yet allow confident diagnosis of species without associated adults. Chironomidae (159 individuals, 3 species) were the numerically dominant family followed by Syrphidae (141 individuals, 3 species), and Psychodidae (81 individuals, 2 species). In one C. capitata sample (PER12-C1-TF092) from Peru we found 81 aquatic Diptera juveniles, the highest number of individuals in our samples and the highest number of morphospecies.
The Peru samples overall had greater diversity of aquatic Diptera (i.e. more morphospecies) than did the Costa Rica samples ( Table 3). The Costa Rica samples were dominated by Ceratopogonidae and Psychodidae and contained a relatively high number of Stratiomyidae . The Costa Rica samples lacked Chironomidae and Culicidae ( Table 3, Figure 3 View Figure 3 ). In contrast, the Peru samples were dominated by Chironomidae and Syrphidae followed by undetermined Brachycera and Culicidae ( Figure 3 View Figure 3 ). Community similarity of aquatic Diptera in the samples was high, exhibiting a distinct pattern supported by a cophenetic correlation coefficient of 0.94 and a low delta coefficient indicating congruence between the original data and the resulting dendrogram ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 ). Most Diptera communities clustered by phytotelmata within plants or phytotelmata from nearby plants within a research site, but some communities within the same plant showed greater similarity to communities from other phytotelmata from other plants ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 ). For example, communities from phytotelmata collected from one plant of Heliconia stricta located in the Villa Carmen Field Station were more similar to communities from phytotelmata collected from different plant species and regions than they were to other communities from the same plant ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 ).
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