4.2 Article

Aquatic Insect Assemblages of Man-Made Permanent Ponds, Buenos Aires City, Argentina

Journal

NEOTROPICAL ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 1, Pages 22-31

Publisher

ENTOMOLOGICAL SOC BRASIL
DOI: 10.1007/s13744-012-0093-1

Keywords

Aquatic insect; artificial ponds; richness estimation; urban environment; urban management

Categories

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnologicas (CONICET) [PIP 02541]

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Freshwater habitats are important elements within urban green space and they are endangered by various types of human activity. With the aim to increase the knowledge about species biodiversity in urban ecosystems, we characterised the assemblages of aquatic insects in four permanent man-made ponds in Buenos Aires city (Argentina) during a 1-year period. We recorded 32 species with Sigara spp. (Hemiptera) as the most abundant. The removal of aquatic vegetation from the studied ponds may have affected both the establishment and permanence of the insect community. Swimmers were the dominant group in the studied sites, followed by burrowers and sprawlers, and only a few strictly climbers were collected. Therefore, all sampled ponds were dominated by collectors (principally gatherers), secondarily by predators and only few shredders were detected, which was much affected by the removal of macrophytes. Non-parametric abundance indexes estimated a number of species very close to the observed number in each site. Conversely, the incidence indexes estimated more species because there were many more taxa present only in one sample than those represented by few individual in a sample. Our data provides some insights on the community of man-made ponds that can improve the management of these aquatic urban habitats. Considering that macrophytes affect animal assemblages due to their role as physical structures that increase the complexity or heterogeneity of habitats, they should not be removed by authorities in order to promote biodiversity.

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