Tropical fruitflies (Diptera: Tephritidae) of the Krakatau Archipelago in 1990 and comments on faunistic changes since 1982 |
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Authors: | E R Schmidt I W B Thornton D L Hancock |
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Institution: | (1) Zoology Department, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia;(2) Division of Plant Protection, Department of Primary Industries, Indooroopilly, Queensland, Australia |
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Abstract: | Three of the Krakatau islands, in Sunda Strait, some 40 km from both Java and Sumatra, are believed to have been totally devastated
by the famous cataclysmic eruption of 1883. The fourth, Anak Krakatau, is an emergent volcanic island which rose from Krakatau's
submerged 1883 caldera in 1930, suffered a self-devastating eruption in 1952/3 and several severely damaging ones since then.
In 1990 the tephritid fauna was monitored on all the islands with Steiner traps. Nine species were found, five of which appeared
to have been found by Yukawa in 1982 (Yukawa 1984) using similar methods and lures, when he noted a total of six species.
As in 1982, the fauna in 1990 was characterized by the numerical dominance ofBactrocera albistrigata (de Meijere) although this appeared to be less marked than in 1982 andBactrocera papayae Drew & Hancock appeared to have increased in relative numbers. The distribution of three species over the islands of the
archipelago had increased and four species not found in 1982 were present. Rakata, Krakatau's remnant and by far the largest
and highest island, carried seven species (six in 1982), Sertung three (two in 1982), Panjang four (one in 1982) and Anak
Krakatau four (one in 1982). Capture rates were lower than in 1982 but still higher than those obtained on the Javan mainland
in 1982. There was a marked difference between the tephritid faunas of Anak Krakatau's two forelands, which were at different
stages of biotic succession. |
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Keywords: | colonization island biogeography Krakatau Tephritidae |
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