바로가기메뉴

본문 바로가기 주메뉴 바로가기

logo

Search Word: Wangpicheon watershed, Search Result: 1
1
Jinyoung Park(Team of Protected Area Research, National Institute of Ecology) ; Jong Kook Jung(Division of Forest Insect pets and Diseases, National Institute of Forest Science) ; Jin Yeol Cha(Team of Protected Area Research, National Institute of Ecology) ; Jong Bong Choi(Department of Applied Biology, College of Ecology & Environmental Sciences, Kyungpook National University) ; Jong Kyun Park(Department of Applied Biology, College of Ecology & Environmental Sciences, Kyungpook National University) 2020, Vol.1, No.1, pp.41-51 https://doi.org/10.22920/PNIE.2020.1.1.41
초록보기
Abstract

Ground beetle fauna of Wangpi-cheon watershed in Yeongyang-gun to Uljin-gun, Gyeongsangbuk-do was investigated from May to October in 2012. Ground beetles were collected by pitfall trapping. A total of 38 species of 20 genera belonging to 8 subfamilies were identified from 2,486 collected ground beetles. Species richness was high in Pterostichinae (16 species), Carabinae (8 species), Harpalinae (5 species), Callistinae (3 species), Nebriinae (3 species) and others (1 species). Dominant species were Synuchus cycloderus (1,025 individuals) and Aulonocarabus seishinensis seishinensis (332 individuals), Pristosia vigil (133 individuals), and Coptolabrus smaragdinus branickii (117 individuals) in order. Monthly changes in abundance of upper dominante genera Pterostichus, Aulonocarabus, Coptolabrus species and Synuchus, Pristosia, Colpodes species showed that the former had the highest number in August whereas the latter increased in June and September. The genus Pterostichus species were preferred in deciduous forest in Wangpicheon watershed, while the genus Synuchus species were collected in mixes forest adjacent to farmland and recreation facilities and the genera Chlaenius, Harpalus species were collected in mixes forest adjacent to farmland nearby stream. Non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS), ground beetles and sites could be divided into two distinct groups: St. 1, St. 2, St. 3 group and St. 4 group. Some species such as Pterostichus orientalis orientalis, P. vicinus and P. bellatrix were particularly abundant at St. 4.


Proceedings of the National Institute of Ecology of the Republic of Korea