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Aquatic Insects : Biodiversity, Ecology and Conservation Challenges



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Autore: Vilenica Marina Visualizza persona
Titolo: Aquatic Insects : Biodiversity, Ecology and Conservation Challenges Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2022
Descrizione fisica: 1 electronic resource (240 p.)
Soggetto topico: Research & information: general
Biology, life sciences
Ecological science, the Biosphere
Soggetto non controllato: odonate
flight period
checklist
Eastern Mediterranean
citizen science
climate
water quality
functional richness
functional specialization
functional evenness
impact of mining and forest fire
aquatic insects
conservation
life cycle
limnology
mayfly
North Africa
rivers
streams
developing country
multivariate statistics
bioindication value
index scores
WQI
HQI
EPT
stoneflies
USA
species richness
hierarchical unit codes
flow intermittence
environmental variables
aquatic macrophytes
karst
dragonflies
damselflies
anthropogenic impact
distribution
local extinction
museum study
Plecoptera
population decline
island biogeography
new species
taxonomy
biodiversity
colonization
endemism
species radiation
diving beetles
freshwater
chironomid larvae
water pollution index (WPI)
alpha and beta diversity
anthropogenic pressure
taxonomic diversity
substrate preference
Danube
floodplain
gomphid nymphs
Orientogomphus
Thailand
Heteroptera
aquatic
species compositions
marine insects
Hemiptera
biogeography
Rif
Atlas
Central Plateau
Oriental Morocco
mayflies
phylogenomics
phylogenetics
systematics
Persona (resp. second.): YanaiZohar
VuatazLaurent
VilenicaMarina
Sommario/riassunto: Insects have successfully inhabited all freshwater habitats on Earth and are often the most diverse and abundant species in streams and ponds. With a disproportionally high species richness compared to the area covered by freshwaters, aquatic insects represent a hotspot of diversity. They play crucial roles in aquatic food webs as primary consumers, detritivores, and predators, but they also represent an important food resource for aquatic and terrestrial predators. Many aquatic insect orders, such as mayflies, stoneflies, and caddisflies, include taxa that are highly sensitive to habitat alterations, reflecting the health of the overall aquatic ecosystem. This feature is exploited by many scientists and practitioners around the world for water and environment quality monitoring. Despite their importance in term of diversity, ecosystem services and bioindication, many aquatic insect species are critically endangered, mainly due to anthropogenic pressures on freshwaters and climate change. Although the research efforts on aquatic insects tremendously increased during the 21st century, much is still left undiscovered. This Special Issue addresses existing knowledge gaps and increases our understanding of taxonomic diversity and phylogeny, distribution patterns, and community ecology of aquatic insects through 15 new studies that cover most of the aquatic insect orders over a wide geographic range. In a context of rapid global biodiversity loss, accelerating the acquisition of both fundamental and applied knowledge is crucial.
Altri titoli varianti: Aquatic Insects
Titolo autorizzato: Aquatic Insects  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 3-0365-4942-0
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910619467403321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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