Ecology of Northern Australian Dacinae (Diptera: Tephritidae) II*. Seasonla Fluctuations in Trap Catches of Dacus opiliae and D. tenuifascia, and their Relationship to Host Phenology and Climatic Factors

1981 ◽  
Vol 29 (6) ◽  
pp. 885 ◽  
Author(s):  
GP Fitt

Changes in trap catches of male Dacus opiliae Drew & Hardy were studied in northern Australia by use of permanently maintained groups of Steiner traps baited with methyl eugenol, an attractant for males of this species. D. opiliae, which is monophagous on a wet-season host species, was common in traps from October to February (wet season) and rare for the remamder of the year. In a second species, D. tenuifascia (May), which is monophagous on a dry-season host, trap catches peaked during the period from August to October after commencement of host fruit production. D. tenuifascia was not absent from traps at any time of the year. Temporal aspects of the seasonal fluctuations of trap catches of D. opiliae could not be explained solely on the basis of increases due to reproduction. Other features, such as the disappearance of D. opiliae from mainland traps during the dry season, were also difficult to explain. It is concluded that changing dispersive behaviour and variable lure response of males. both controlled by environmental variables, may have strongly influenced the observed fluctuations.

2008 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos Henrique de Freitas ◽  
Eleonore Z. F. Setz ◽  
Alba R. B. Araújo ◽  
Nivar Gobbi

Capuchin monkeys occupy a wide range of habitats where they feed on fruits, arthropods, and vertebrates. Their large home ranges (80-900 ha) suggest that living in forest fragments may challenge their adaptability. We identified and quantified the main food items of Cebus libidinosus Spix, 1823 in forests fragments (100 ha) in southeastern Brazil. We recorded the feeding activities of two groups using scan sampling over a 13-month period. The diet was composed of fruits, crops, animal prey, seeds, plant matter and undetermined. Fruit was eaten more in the wet season than in the dry season, and maize and sugar cane consumption peaked in the early dry season. The proportion of fruit in the diet was positively correlated with fruiting intensity of zoochorous trees. The plant diet included 54 species, with maize, Rhamnidium elaeocarpus, Acrocomia aculeata, Guazuma ulmifolia and Cariniana, being most important. Although dietary composition and diversity were similar to capuchins in larger forest fragments, feeding on crops attained higher percentages at times when zoochorous fruit production was low in fragments.


2020 ◽  
Vol 60 (5) ◽  
pp. 683
Author(s):  
M. K. Bowen ◽  
F. Chudleigh ◽  
R. M. Dixon ◽  
M. T. Sullivan ◽  
T. Schatz ◽  
...  

Context Phosphorus (P) deficiency occurs in beef cattle grazing many rangeland regions with low-P soils, including in northern Australia, and may severely reduce cattle productivity in terms of growth, reproductive efficiency and mortality. However, adoption of effective P supplementation by cattle producers in northern Australia is low. This is likely to be due to lack of information and understanding of the profitability of P supplementation where cattle are P-deficient. Aims The profitability of P supplementation was evaluated for two dissimilar regions of northern Australia, namely (1) the Katherine region of the Northern Territory, and (2) the Fitzroy Natural Resource Management (NRM) region of central Queensland. Methods Property-level, regionally relevant herd models were used to determine whole-of-business productivity and profitability over 30 years. The estimated costs and benefits of P supplementation were obtained from collation of experimental data and expert opinion of persons with extensive experience of the industry. The economic consequences of P supplementation at the property level were assessed by comparison of base production without P supplementation with the expected production of P-supplemented herds, and included the implementation phase and changes over time in herd structure. In the Katherine region, it was assumed that the entire cattle herd (breeders and growing cattle) grazed acutely P-deficient land types and the consequences of (1) no P supplementation, or P supplementation during (2) the dry season, or (3) both the wet and dry seasons (i.e. 3 scenarios) were evaluated. In the Fitzroy NRM region, it was assumed that only the breeders grazed P-deficient land types with three categories of P deficiency (marginal, deficient and acutely deficient), each with either (1) no P supplementation, or P supplementation during (2) the wet season, (3) the dry season, or (4) both the wet and dry seasons (i.e. 12 scenarios). Key results In the Katherine region, year-round P supplementation of the entire cattle herd (7400 adult equivalents) grazing acutely P-deficient pasture resulted in a large increase in annual business profit (+AU$500000). Supplementing with P (and N) only in the dry season increased annual business profit by +AU$200000. In the Fitzroy NRM region, P supplementation during any season of the breeder herd grazing deficient or acutely P-deficient pastures increased profit by +AU$2400–AU$45000/annum (total cattle herd 1500 adult equivalents). Importantly, P supplementation during the wet season-only resulted in the greatest increases in profit within each category of P deficiency, comprising +AU$5600, AU$6300 and AU$45000 additional profit per annum for marginal, deficient and acutely P-deficient herds respectively. Conclusions The large economic benefits of P supplementation for northern beef enterprises estimated in the present study substantiate the current industry recommendation that effective P supplementation is highly profitable when cattle are grazing P-deficient land types. Implications The contradiction of large economic benefits of P supplementation and the generally low adoption rates by the cattle industry in northern Australia suggests a need for targeted research and extension to identify the specific constraints to adoption, including potential high initial capital costs.


2002 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 373
Author(s):  
Xiaoyong Chen ◽  
Derek Eamus ◽  
Lindsay B. Hutley

Soil CO2 efflux rates were measured in a eucalypt open forest in a tropical savanna of northern Australia, with a portable closed chamber and CO2 gas analyser. Both abiotic (soil temperature and water content) and biotic (litterfall and fine-root growth) factors that may influence soil CO2 efflux were examined. Daytime rates of soil CO2 efflux rate were consistently higher than nocturnal values. Maximal rates occurred during late afternoons when soil temperatures were also maximal and minimum values were recorded during the early morning (0400–0800 hours). Average soil CO2 efflux was 5.37 mol m–2 s–1 (range 3.5–6.7 mol m–2 s–1 during the wet season and declined to 2.20 mol m–2 s–1 (range 1.2–3.6 mol m–2 s–1) during the dry season. The amount of carbon released from soil was 14.3 t ha–1 year–1, with approximately 70% released during the wet season and 30% during the dry season. The rate of efflux was correlated with soil moisture content and soil temperature only during the wet season, when root growth and respiration were high. During the dry season there was no correlation with soil temperature. These results are discussed in relation to the carbon balance of tropical savannas.


2006 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
D.M. Pfukenyi ◽  
S. Mukaratirwa ◽  
A.L. Willingham ◽  
J. Monrad

During the period between January 1999 and December 2000, the distribution and seasonal patterns of Schistosoma mattheei infections in cattle in the highveld and lowveld communal grazing areas of Zimbabwe were determined through monthly coprological examination. Faecal samples of cattle were collected from 12 and nine dipping sites in the highveld and lowveld communal grazing areas, respectively. Patterns of distribution and seasonal fluctuations of the intermediate host-snail populations and the climatic factors influencing the distribution were also determined at monthly intervals from November 1998 to October 2000, a period of 24 months, in six dams and six streams in the highveld and nine dams in the lowveld communal grazing areas. Monthly, each site was sampled for relative snail density, the vegetation cover and type, and physical and chemical properties of the water. Mean monthly rainfall and temperature were recorded. Snails collected at the same time were individually examined for shedding of cercariae of S. mattheei and Schistosoma haematobium. A total of 16 264 (5 418 calves, 5 461 weaners and 5 385 adults) faecal samples were collected during the entire period of study and 734 (4.5 %) were positive for S. mattheei eggs. Significantly higher prevalences were found in the highveld compared to the lowveld (P < 0.001), calves compared to adult cattle (P < 0.01) and the wet season compared to the dry season (P < 0.01). Faecal egg output peaked from October/ November to March / April for both years of the study. Bulinus globosus, the snail intermediate host of S. mattheei was recorded from the study sites with the highveld having a significantly higher abundance of the snails than the lowveld (P < 0.01). Monthly densities of B. globosus did not show a clearcut pattern although there were peaks between March / May and September / November. The mean num ber of snails collected was positively correlated with the water plants Nymphaea caerulea and Typha species. Overall, 2.5 % of B. globosus were shedding Schistosoma cercariae. In the highveld, 2.8 % of B. globosus were infected with schistosome cercariae and 1.5 % in the lowveld, with the figures at individual sites ranging from 0-18.8 % in the highveld and from 0-4.5 % in the lowveld. The cercariae recorded here were a mixture of S. mattheei and S. haematobium since they share the same intermediate host. The transmission of Schistosoma cercariae exhibited a marked seasonal pattern, being more intensive during the hot, dry season (September / November).


1963 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 497-508 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. T. Baldry

The persistence of DDT deposits, derived from dilutions of an emulsion concentrate, Arkotine D.25, on the leaves of riverine vegetation in the Northern Guinea Savannah vegetation zone of Nigeria was studied in the laboratory by a bioassay method using teneral females of Glossina palpalis (R.-D.) as test insects. Irrespective of whether sprayed in the dry or wet season, deposits derived from sprays containing 5.0 per cent. DDT produced by the Warley knapsack sprayer were still reasonably toxic one year after spraying. Deposits derived from sprays having a concentration of DDT varying from 1·25 to 5·0 per cent. DDT were equally toxic when young, but those from the lower concentrations were weathered much more rapidly than those from the 5·0 per cent, sprays. Young deposits produced by Warley and Motoblo sprayers were equally toxic, but deposits from the Motoblo deteriorated more rapidly than those of the Warley.The toxicity of the DDT deposits on leaves varied regularly with the seasons. The various climatic factors that it is thought influenced the variations in toxicity are discussed. Accumulations of wind-blown dust on the leaves during the late dry season and low evaporation rates at the height of the rains appear to be responsible for reduced toxicity at those times; in the early wet season, the occasional violent storm probably washes off the leaves the dust accumulated during the dry season and makes the insecticidal deposits once more available. Heavy rainfall is important in removing the insecticidal deposits from the vegetation, and leaf decay and refoliation are important in reducing the availability of the deposits. The implications of these variations in toxicity and factors that reduce the availability of the deposits are discussed in relation to the eradication of riverine tsetse.Great differences in the rates of foliage decay and refoliation occur between different riverine plants, and it is suggested that a thorough study of this feature in riverine plants and of resting sites favoured by tsetse flies might reveal information that would enable tsetse to be eradicated by selective spraying of certain plant species only.


1984 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 303 ◽  
Author(s):  
JA Taylor ◽  
GR Friend

Relationships among ground surface features attributable to feral buffalo (viz. wallows, trails, pug marks and dung pats), vegetation structure, and lifeform spectrum were examined in both dry and wet seasons in a tropical monsoonal area of northern Australia. In the dry season, the frequency of pug marks was negatively correlated with the number of trails and dung pats, and positively correlated with the number of wallows. In the wet season only dung pats and wallows were significantly correlated. In the dry season, wallows were not associated with any vegetation structure or lifeform attribute, but in the wet season they were associated with dense foliage <1 m high. Trails occurred in areas of low dense vegetation (<0.5 m) in the dry season, but in the wet were uncommon and positively associated with lianas. Pug marks occurred mainly in the lower-elevation, treeless areas dominated by forbs. Whereas the nature and strength of the relationships of pug marks to plant lifeform or vegetation structure remained constant from season to season, those involving dung pats changed seasonally. In the dry season, dung pats were associated with the higher-elevation areas where trees, lianas, dense mid-level foliage (1.5-2.5 m) and leaf-litter were common. In the wet, they were associated with low vegetation (<1 m) dominated by forbs, and were negatively correlated with the factors important in the dry.


2003 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grant Allan ◽  
Andrea Johnson ◽  
Shane Cridland ◽  
Nikki Fitzgerald

The success of early dry season burning programs in tropical savannas of northern Australia could be improved with timely information on curing state of fuel loads. Variable characteristics of each wet season, the onset of the dry season, and variations of fuel loads within major landscape types affect the annual cycle of curing. Significant relationships were derived between ground-based visual estimates of curing, and estimates of relative greenness derived from NDVI images from NOAA AVHRR and SPOT Vegetation satellite sensors. There were distinct differences between soil types (red v. black) and seasons (1999 v. 2000). The next stage is to test if relationships are robust enough to be used operationally to schedule aerial control burning operations in remote, inaccessible and sparsely unpopulated areas.


1981 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janice A. Derr

AbstractLight-trap catches of Dysdercus bimaculatus Stål and weekly phenological records of its host-plants over a period of three years on Barro Colorado Island, Panama, are discussed in relation to a year-long study of population growth at selected plants. Population build-up of D. bimaculatus occurred on a sequence of seed crops from wild host-plants in the dry season. Each year, the largest number of bugs caught in the light-trap occurred after a drop in vapour pressure deficit marked the end of the dry season. Thus, the population appears ‘poised’ to attack cotton crops maturing in the late wet season. A stepwise linear regression indicated that each year, the variance in size of Pseudobombax septinatum crops (maturing at the end of the dry season) explained the largest proportion of variance in the light-trap capture of D. bimaculatus. However, estimates from the field study indicated that Ceiba pentandra crops were more important than P. septinatum in building up numbers of adult cotton stainers. The discrepancy between the field study and the longterm phonological monitoring survey would be resolved if D. bimaculatus adults experience a dispersal flight at the end of the dry season. This flight would enable the insect to locate better-quality seed crops in drier habitats that mature in the late wet season, such as Sterculia apetala or cotton. Light-trap captures at the end of the dry season in areas such as Barro Colorado Island where Ceiba and Pseudobombax occur, could be an index to the intensity of attack on cotton crops in nearby drier areas.


1980 ◽  
Vol 23 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. Aleem

AbstractThe distribution of marine fungi in Sierra Leone is studied in the light of hydrographic and climatic factors.Altogether 27 spp. have been identified to species level, comprising 3 Phycomycetes 14 Ascomycetes and 10 Deuteromycetes. All these spp. are considered as new records to the country and about 50 % of them are inhabitants of mangrove swamps under tidal influence.The climate of Sierra Leone is characterized by two main seasons: a wet season (May - November) and a dry season (December-April).Mangrove mycota display a seasonal periodicity, increasing in number of spp. and growth intensity in the wet . season. Degradation of wood was also active during this season, apparently more by members of Deuteromycetes such as Cirrenalia spp., Periconia prolifica and Zalerion spp. than by Ascomycetes.Sea foam was also richer in fungal ascospores (including 6 spp. of Corollospora) and conidia of Deuteromycetes in the wet than in the dry season.Estuarine foam. however. comprises several Hyphomycetes of freshwater or terrestrial origin brought in by runoff during the rainy season (e.g. Alternaria, Curvularia, Drechslera, A cro sporidium , etc.)No distinct vertical zonation was displayed by the lignicolous fungi inhabiting the mangrove.The geographical distribution of the higher marine fungi under consideration has been compared with those on the opposite side of the Atlantic as well as in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Out of 24 spp. found in Sierra Leone, 21 spp. (88 %) occur on the opposite side of the Atlantic. while an equal number is known in the Pacific. Only 15 spp. (63 %) are recorded in the Indian Ocean. The last figure is due to our limited knowledge of Indian Ocean fungi and is expected to increase in future.The distribution of mangrove fungi encountered in Sierra Leone is considered as a "community" comprising host specific forms such as Leptosphaeria avicenniae and Cytospora rhizophorae, as well as facultative forms. Out of 14 such spp. in Sierra Leone, 13 (93 %) occur in the Western Atlantic. 12(86 %) in the Pacific and 10(72 %) in the Indian Ocean so far. The close affinities of mangrove fungi in the 3 oceans, paralleled with similar affinities of mangrove floras lend support to the theory of a common center in the West-Indo Pacific for the mangrove flora and associated mycota from which a drift took place in various directions into the 3 oceans in question. The theory was postulated by Ekman (1953) for the distribution of tropical fauna and found support by Macnae (1968) for the distribution of the mangrove flora and fauna. It also allows for an endemic element as the drift deviates from the center.The closer affinities between Eastern and Western Atlantic mycota could be explained by the current gyres to the north and south of the equator and their role in transporting mangrove seeds. wood and associated fungi between the African arid American coastlines.


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