M Sc Dissertation(WII)
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://192.168.202.180:4000/handle/123456789/3
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Item Patterns of Ant Species Richness and Composition in Deccan Inselberg-Matrix systems of Karnataka(Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, 2025) Sujay G; Adhikari, B.S.My study looked into patterns of ant species richness and composition of Deccan inselbergs and surrounding human altered matrix (natural habitat, mango plantation) in Ramanagara taluk, Karnataka, in a bid to recognize their ecological and conservation potential. Ants were chosen as the model taxa, due to their micro-habitat specificity, to better understand environmental gradients and related faunal associations at different scales. Pitfall traps were used as the sampling methodology for ants, and habitat variables were collected at each trap; ants were identified until morphospecies level within respective genera. Data analysis included understanding habitat differences, patterns of species richness and composition, and relating these aspects. The results showed that inselbergs were distinct in terms of habitat structure as compared to the matrix, with the latter showing less vegetation complexity (lesser in mango plantation). While matrix and inselberg showed comparable levels of ant richness, delving deeper it was seen that natural habitat within matrix showed significantly higher richness as compared to the species poor, uneven mango plantation ant assemblage. Similarly, inselbergs and matrix showed similar average composition of their respective ant communities. However closer inspection showed that natural habitat and plantation, when compared separately with inselbergs, showed compositional dissimilarity to greater magnitude. Habitat variables, while statistically significant in their relationship with patterns of ant composition and richness at finer scales, explained a minimal amount of total variation seen in both. Inselbergs, as understood through this study, are not “barren wastelands”, but on the contrary are important reservoirs of regional diversity. In light of rapid human alteration of the surrounding matrix and threats like quarrying, invasive species, inselbergs and the low lying natural habitat need to be given greater conservation importance. This study is hopefully just one of many that are required to further assess the conservation and ecological potential of these amazing ecosystems.Item The Impact of Land Use Change on Litter Beetle and Ant Communities a Coffee-Dominated Landscape in Chickmagalur District, Karnataka(Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, 2001) Badrinarayan, Smitha; Krishnamurthy, Jagdish; Uniyal, V.P.Human-modified habitats dominate the landscape on earth. There is an urgent need for investigations into the diversity of biota supported by different land use systems that replace forests. The plantation of coffee is one such land use that occurs in large tracts of the Western Ghats in Karnataka. An observational study on changes in litter faunal communities caused by conversion 'of forests to coffee was attempted at the Koppa and Narasimharajapura taluks of Chickmagalur district. Four replicate blocks containing three treatments: forest, polyculture shade coffee plantations and mono culture shade coffee plantations, were selected using detailed spatial information that existed for this area. These included a land cover map, aerial photographs and topographic sheets. The information from these sources was used to obtain a list of possible study sites, the suitability of which were assessed on the basis of field visits and interviews of the locals. Litter beetle and ant communities were sampled using pitfall traps along two transects within each of the treatments. Measurements of microclimate, vegetation structure and litter parameters were made along with sampling for litter fauna. The organisms obtained in the pitfall :traps were sorted out and the ants and beetles occurring in it were identified to the level of morphospecies. Comparisons of the diversity of beetle and ant morpho species in the forest and two coffee shade treatments were made on the basis of the occurrence and abundance of different morphospecies. Cluster analyses of the twelve sites were done based on the distances between the communities found in them. Patterns revealed using exploratory data analyses were tested using quantitative statistical sampling. There were significant differences in microhabitat structure between the three treatments. Forests were found to be more humid and had more equitable conditions than either of the coffee systems. The beetle and ant communities in the three treatments were also found to be distinctly different. Beetle morphospecies richness and abundance was highest in forests and lowest in the coffee monoculture shade systems. Ants, while having an equal number of morphospecies across the three treatments, were seen to be dominated in abundance by a few species in the coffee mono culture shade systems. Generally, forest sites were seen to cluster together in one group while coffee mono culture shade sites clustered in another. The polyculture shade coffee treatments were seen to be intermediate in their community composition between forests and mono culture shade coffee plantations. The high community turnover rates across the landscape suggest that even remnant forest patches in this coffee dominated landscape need to be protected from further degradation. For further conservation of the litter faunal community, traditional coffee polyculture shade systems need to be promoted to halt conversion to silver oak dominated agricultural systems.
