"From freeze with moths": first discovery of a habitat in Andean Salars for noctuid moths
AUTOR(ES)
Angulo, Andrés O., Camaño, Andrés, Angulo, Gino A.
FONTE
Neotropical Entomology
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO
2006-08
RESUMO
Noctuid moths flutter in the high Andes nights at 4,000 m. s. n. m. Their larvae feed on aerial or underground parts of succulent plants. Many of these species are new to science. Strategies and adaptations of the moths for survival in the high Andes mountains are: a circulatory system that includes an abdominal thoracic countercurrent heat exchanger, and they are insulated from the environment by a coat of dense hair like scales. Recently, during January and July 2004, in the northern desert of Chile, called Salar de Punta Negra, under the salt crust we found a large number of pupae and larvae that correspond to three new species of noctuid moth - this pupation site is located in a 10 m wide area surrounding a water body; the mean observed density is 13 to 15 pupae per 100 cm². This is a new extreme habitat conquered by noctuid moths.
Documentos Relacionados
- “FROM TEDIUM TO APATHY...”
- Introduction to “From the Academy”
- Commentary on "From local to global in quasiconformal structures".
- Discovery of endangered annual killifish Austrolebias cheradophilus (Aplocheiloidei: Rivulidae) in Brazil, with comments on habitat, population structure and conservation status
- Evidence for multiple adaptive peaks from populations of bacteria evolving in a structured habitat.