Chenchouni H, Menasria T, Neffar S, Chafaa S, Bradai L, Chaibi R, Mekahlia MN, Bendjoudi D, Bachir AS.
Quantifying the impact of environmental factors on the spatiotemporal structure of insect communities in a semi-arid Sabkha ecosystem. PeerJ Preprints [Internet]. 2015.
Publisher's VersionAbstractThe current study highlights some knowledge on the diversity and structure of insect communities and trophic groups living in Sabkha Djendli (semi-arid area of Northeastern Algeria). The entomofauna was monthly sampled from March to November 2006 using pitfall traps at eight sites located at the vicinity of the Sabkha. Structural and diversity parameters (species richness, Shannon index, evenness) were measured for both insect orders and trophic guilds. The canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) was applied to determine how vegetation parameters (species richness and cover) influence spatial and seasonal fluctuations of insect assemblages. The catches totalled 434 insect individuals classified into 75 species, 62 genera, 31 families and 7 orders, where Coleoptera and Hymenoptera were the most abundant and constant over seasons and study stations. Spring and autumn presented the highest values of diversity parameters. Individual-based Chao-1 species richness estimator indicated 126 species for the total individuals captured in the Sabkha. Based on catch abundances, the structure of functional trophic groups was predators (37.3%), saprophages (26.7%), phytophages (20.5%), polyphages (10.8%), coprophages (4.6%); whereas in terms of numbers of species, they can be classified as phytophages (40%), predators (25.3%), polyphages (13.3%), saprophages (12%), coprophages (9.3%). The CCA demonstrated that phytophages and saprophages as well as Coleoptera and Orthoptera were positively correlated with the two parameters of vegetation, especially in spring and summer. While the abundance of coprophages was positively correlated with species richness of plants, polyphage density was positively associated with vegetation cover. The insect community showed high taxonomic and functional diversity that is closely related to diversity and vegetation cover in different site stations and seasons.
Amouch M, Lombarkia F.
Rakočević’s property for generalized derivations. Rendiconti del Circolo Matematico di Palermo (1952-)Rendiconti del Circolo Matematico di Palermo (1952-). 2015;64 :57-66.
Audfray A, Beldjoudi M, Breiman A, Hurbin A, Boos I, Unverzagt C, Bouras M, Lantuejoul S, Coll J-L, Varrot A.
A recombinant fungal lectin for labeling truncated glycans on human cancer cells. PloS onePloS one. 2015;10 :e0128190.
Hassad M, BEDRA S, BEDRA R, BENKOUDA S, Boughrara AS, FORTAKI T.
Resonant characteristics of rectangular Microstrip antenna printed on electric–magnetic uniaxial anisotropic substrates. International Journal of Microwave and Wireless TechnologiesInternational Journal of Microwave and Wireless Technologies. 2015;7 :783-790.
Raikwar AK, Tiwari KK.
A Review On Study Of Swing Jaw Plates For Size Reduction Machine. International Journal Of Recent Technology Science & ManagementInternational Journal Of Recent Technology Science & Management. 2015.
Testas K, SLIMANI S.
Rhumatisme articulaire aigu : mise au point et perspectives. Rev Mar Rhum 2015Rev Mar Rhum 2015. 2015;31 :20-26.
Bahloul M, CHRIFI-ALAOUI L, Souissi M, Drid S, Chaabane M.
Robust flux and load torque estimation in induction machine. 2015 European Control Conference (ECC). 2015 :666-671.
Ramdane A, Naceri F, Belkacem S.
A Robust Hybrid Control for Voltage-Fed Induction Motor Drives based on The Artificial Intelligence Techniques. International Journal of Hybrid Information TechnologyInternational Journal of Hybrid Information Technology. 2015;8 :85-96.
Oussama N, Lemnouar N.
A Robust Watermarking Scheme for Ownership Protection and Deadlock Prevention. Proceedings of the International Conference on Intelligent Information Processing, Security and Advanced Communication. 2015 :1-5.