25 new beetle species found in Turkish oaks02/06/2010 09:29:43
Nicklas Jansson next to one of the giant oaks that is home to the Ampedus beetle. June 2010. Old hollow oak trees provide important habitat for a large number of insects, especially beetles. During a study of oak trees on grazing land in Turkey, 25 new species of beetle have been found. "Most of them would disappear if the trees were to be cut down, and the risk is great", says project leader Nicklas Jansson, beetle ecologist at Linköping University (LiU) in Sweden. 18 species of oak tree in Turkey In Turkey there are 18 species of the oak family, Quercus. Nicklas Jansson and his co-workers from two Turkish universities have spent five years collecting beetles from oak trees in four large pastures in the south of the country near the border with Syria. These areas, 1,200-1,500 metres above sea level, are important for sheep and goat farming, but are now threatened by felling to make way for productive forest management. As with all felling there is a major risk that some species become extinct since the oak dwelling beetles are often purely dependent on individual oak trees. "Some of the species seem to have a very low motivation to leave and find a new oak", says Nicklas Jansson. New beetle species That new species would be found among the fairly popular beetle families that were looked at was a surprise. Most of the newly discovered beetles belong to the Elateridae and Tenobrionidae families and have been identified by some 20 specialists across Europe. The results were presented at a conference on oak ecology at Linköping University, arranged with Suleyman Demirel University and Adiyaman University. Turkish oaks very rich in species
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Read the comments about this article and leave your own comment