PATTERNS IN THE ORGANIZATION OF THE ARTHROPOD COMMUNITY ASSOCIATED WITH AN AUSTRALIAN RAINFOREST TREE: HOW DISTINCT FROM ELSEWHERE?
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Keywords

arthropod
community
rainforest

How to Cite

Basset, Y. (1993). PATTERNS IN THE ORGANIZATION OF THE ARTHROPOD COMMUNITY ASSOCIATED WITH AN AUSTRALIAN RAINFOREST TREE: HOW DISTINCT FROM ELSEWHERE?. Selbyana, 14, 13–15. Retrieved from https://journals.flvc.org/selbyana/article/view/122781

Abstract

Several features ofthe arthropod community associated with an Australian rainforest tree,
Argyrodendron actinophyllum Edlin, are summarized. These include: taxonomic composition and its major
determinants; species richness and guild structure; arthropod seasonality and, in particular, the influence
ofleafproduction on associated herbivores; spatial distribution ofarthropods and ofleafdamage; species
diversity and body size relationships; synecology and aggregation pattems; and host specificity ofassociated
herbivores. Comparative data from similar arboreal communities are scarce but suggest that some ofthese
features may be similar in other communities, and others dissimilar. Tree species and overall rain forest
features may be responsible for these dissimilarities. Due to the extensive structural, phenological and
biochemical diversities ofrainforesttrees, arboreal communities are unlikely to follow a single, well-codified,
type oforganization. However, it may be possible to recognize several types ofarboreal communities by
considering the resource base on which the community is founded.

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