Manaus (intermediate)
Basic information
Sample name: Manaus (intermediate)

Reference: C. S. Monteiro-Jùnior, L. Juen, and N. Hamada. 2014. Effects of urbanization on stream habitats and associated adult dragonfly and damselfly communities in central Brazilian Amazonia. Landscape and Urban Planning 127:28-40 [ER 2249]
Geography
Country: Brazil

State: Amazonas


Coordinate: 3° 4' S, 60° 0' W
Coordinate basis: estimated from map

Geography comments: eight sites "in the municipality of Manaus"

Environment
Habitat: tropical/subtropical upland river

Protection: unprotected

Substrate: water edge

MAP: 2300.0

Habitat comments: "in peri-urban areas such as 'sítios' (small plots of non-urban land that are often owned by urban residents for weekend recreation)... The region’s climate is of the equatorial hot and humid Am type, according to the current Köppen climate classification... with two well-defined climatic seasons (a rainy season between November and June, and a dry season between July and October) and average annual rainfall ranging from 2200 to 2400mm"

Methods
Life forms: odonates

Sites: 8

Sampling methods: line transect,other nets

Sample size: 298 individuals

Years: 2010, 2011

Seasons: dry,wet or monsoon

Sampling comments: "Samples were collected on the banks of each stream during two different periods... from November to December 2010 (rainy season) and June to July 2011 (dry season)... Each site was sampled twice for 90 min, on average, by two collectors... Adults were collected according to the protocol of De Marco (1998), which involves sweeping a set area (a 100 m stretch on each bank of the stream and divided into five segments of 20m) with an entomological hand-net"

Metadata
Sample number: 2308

Contributor: John Alroy

Enterer: John Alroy

Created: 2016-10-21 09:35:32

Modified: 2020-01-14 07:37:19

Abundance distribution
31 species
9 singletons
total count 298
geometric series index: 53.7
Fisher's α: 8.702
geometric series k: 0.8684
Hurlbert's PIE: 0.8964
Shannon's H: 2.7154
Good's u: 0.9699
Each square represents a species. Square sizes are proportional to counts.
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