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Canopy Arthropods Book

Canopy Arthropods
Canopy Arthropods, As forests are cut down, altered and fragmented, the communities of organisms associated with them are also affected. Predictions of global species extinction rates based on forest loss range 1% to 10% each decade. Because arthropods comprise the largest , Canopy Arthropods has a rating of 3 stars
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Canopy Arthropods, As forests are cut down, altered and fragmented, the communities of organisms associated with them are also affected. Predictions of global species extinction rates based on forest loss range 1% to 10% each decade. Because arthropods comprise the largest , Canopy Arthropods
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  • Canopy Arthropods
  • Written by author Nigel E. Stork
  • Published by Springer-Verlag New York, LLC, June 2008
  • As forests are cut down, altered and fragmented, the communities of organisms associated with them are also affected. Predictions of global species extinction rates based on forest loss range 1% to 10% each decade. Because arthropods comprise the largest
  • As forests are cut down, altered and fragmented, the communities of organisms associated with them are also affected. Predictions of global species extinction rates based on forest loss range 1% to 10% each decade. Because arthropods comprise the largest
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Preface
1Sampling arthropods from tree-crowns by fogging with knockdown insecticides: lessons from studies of oak tree beetle assemblages in Richmond Park (UK)3
2A review of methods for sampling arthropods in tree canopies27
3Advances in using the canopy fogging technique to collect living arthropods from tree-crowns53
4Knockdown efficiency of natural pyrethrum and survival rate of living arthropods obtained by canopy fogging in Central Amazonia67
5Beetle species diversity and faunal similarity in Venezuelan rainforest tree canopies85
6Host-specificity and the effective specialization of tropical canopy beetles104
7Determinants of species richness in assemblages of canopy arthropods in rainforests131
8Canopy arthropods of coastal Sitka spruce trees on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada151
9The beetle fauna of different tree species in forests of Rwanda and East Zaire169
10Tree-crown beetles in context: a comparison of canopy and other ecotone assemblages in a lowland tropical forest in Sulawesi184
11Patterns of beetle species diversity in Castanopsis acuminatissima (Fagaceae) trees studied with canopy fogging in mid-montane New Guinea rainforest224
12Species abundance and body size relationships in insect herbivores associated with New Guinea forest trees, with particular reference to insect host-specificity237
13Arthropod biodiversity in the canopy of New Caledonian forests265
14Diversity of an Amazonian canopy grasshopper community in relation to resource partitioning and phylogeny281
15Dipteran tree-crown assemblages in a diverse southern temperate rainforest320
16Diversity and recolonization dynamics of selected arthropod groups on different tree species in a lowland rainforest in Sabah, Malaysia with special reference to Formicidae344
17The ant fauna of tree canopies in Central Amazonia: a first assessment382
18Estimation of arboreal and terrestrial arthropod densities in the forest canopy as measured by insecticide smoking401
19The ecology and behaviour of arboreal dung beetles in Borneo417
20Studies on the biology of a canopy-dwelling carabid beetle collected by canopy fogging in the rainforest of Sulawesi (Indonesia)433
21Bioacoustic monitoring of insect communities in a Bornean rainforest canopy442
22Spatial and temporal use of microhabitats as a key strategy for the colonization of tree bark by Entomobrya nivalis L. (Collembola: Entomobryidae)453
23The epiphytic lichen Evernia prunastri L. as a habitat for arthropods: shelter from desiccation, food-limitation and indirect mutualism477
24Distinguishing the woods from the trees497
25Insect biomass in Amazonian forest fragments510
26The significance of edge effects in the management of forests for invertebrate biodiversity534
27Canopy arthropod studies for the future551
Index563


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Canopy Arthropods, As forests are cut down, altered and fragmented, the communities of organisms associated with them are also affected. Predictions of global species extinction rates based on forest loss range 1% to 10% each decade. Because arthropods comprise the largest , Canopy Arthropods

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Canopy Arthropods, As forests are cut down, altered and fragmented, the communities of organisms associated with them are also affected. Predictions of global species extinction rates based on forest loss range 1% to 10% each decade. Because arthropods comprise the largest , Canopy Arthropods

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