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LARGE MIXED-SPECIES DISPERSAL FLIGHTS OF PREDATORY AND SCAVENGING AQUATIC HETEROPTERA AND COLEOPTERA, NORTHERN ARIZONA, USA

We report 4 incidents of large (hundreds to hundreds of thousands of individuals) mixed-species flights of predatory and scavenging aquatic Heteroptera and Coleoptera. The events occurred on normal (mostly clear, calm) autumn 2005 and spring 2006 late afternoons near Flagstaff, Arizona. Flight days...

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Published in:Western North American naturalist 2007-12, Vol.67 (4), p.587-592
Main Authors: Stevens, Lawrence E., Polhemus, John T., Durfee, Richard S., Olson, Carl A.
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Polhemus, John T.
Durfee, Richard S.
Olson, Carl A.
description We report 4 incidents of large (hundreds to hundreds of thousands of individuals) mixed-species flights of predatory and scavenging aquatic Heteroptera and Coleoptera. The events occurred on normal (mostly clear, calm) autumn 2005 and spring 2006 late afternoons near Flagstaff, Arizona. Flight days were either near the full moon or in advanced waning lunar periods. At least 18 species were involved in the flights, with as many as 16 species (7 species of Heteroptera in 3 families, 9 species of Coleoptera in 2 families) in a single flight. Heteroptera (especially from the family Corixidae) were 2–4 orders of magnitude more numerous than Coleoptera. The diasporas plummeted, with much direct mortality, onto green metal roofs, and the largest event lasted more than 2 hours. Even after 2 days, uninjured individuals failed to resume their flights. The literature suggests that such flights occur for autumn movement to winter habitats or for location of springtime habitats for reproduction. The relative proportions of species in flocks were similar neither to the relative proportions in the region nor to those in nearby livestock watering tanks, indicating that the flights consisted of nonrandom assemblages of species. These events are rare or unique observations of coordinated movement of mixed predatory and scavenging invertebrate species.
doi_str_mv 10.3398/1527-0904(2007)67[587:LMDFOP]2.0.CO;2
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The relative proportions of species in flocks were similar neither to the relative proportions in the region nor to those in nearby livestock watering tanks, indicating that the flights consisted of nonrandom assemblages of species. These events are rare or unique observations of coordinated movement of mixed predatory and scavenging invertebrate species.</abstract><pub>Brigham Young University</pub><doi>10.3398/1527-0904(2007)67[587:LMDFOP]2.0.CO;2</doi><tpages>6</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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ispartof Western North American naturalist, 2007-12, Vol.67 (4), p.587-592
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source JSTOR-E-Journals
subjects Aquatic habitats
aquatic invertebrates
Arizona
Beetles
Biological taxonomies
Coleoptera
Corixidae
dispersal
Green roofs
Hemiptera
Heteroptera
Insect flight
Livestock
mixed-species flocking
Ponds
Predators
Scavenging
Taxa
title LARGE MIXED-SPECIES DISPERSAL FLIGHTS OF PREDATORY AND SCAVENGING AQUATIC HETEROPTERA AND COLEOPTERA, NORTHERN ARIZONA, USA
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