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Patterns of sandfly distribution in tropical forest: a causal hypothesis
Authors:JANE MEMMOTT
Affiliation:Department of Pure and Applied Biology, University of Leeds, U.K.
Abstract:1. In tropical rain forest, phlebotomine sandflies (Diptera: Psychodidae), such as Lutzomyia vespertilionis and L.ylephiletor, have an aggregated distribution on their tree buttress diurnal resting sites, as studied during 1987-88 at Finca la Selva in the Caribbean lowlands of Costa Rica. 2. Experimental transfer of flies to trees not used as resting sites indicated that many apparently suitable sites remain unoccupied. 3. Observations of sandflies on the buttresses revealed that males and females are juxtaposed more frequently than expected by chance alone. Courtship behaviour by three of the four species of sandfly studied was observed on the buttresses. 4. It is suggested that the use of buttresses as swarming sites for mating behaviour is more likely to account for the observed distribution patterns of sandflies than their use of buttresses simply as diurnal resting sites.
Keywords:Lutzomyia spp    Phlebotominae    aggregated distribution    swarming sites    tree buttress    tropical rain forest    Costa Rica
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