Insects and forests: the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English French |
Veröffentlicht: |
London [u.a.]
Intercept Limited
2000
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XII, 668 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 1898298688 |
Internformat
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240 | 1 | 0 | |a Les insectes et la forêt |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Insects and forests |b the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment |c Roger Dajoz |
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650 | 7 | |a Insectes des forêts - Écologie |2 ram | |
650 | 4 | |a Insectes forestiers | |
650 | 4 | |a Insectes forestiers - Europe de l'Ouest | |
650 | 4 | |a Insectes forestiers - Écologie | |
650 | 4 | |a Insectes nuisibles | |
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650 | 7 | |a Relations insecte-plante |2 ram | |
650 | 7 | |a Écologie des forêts |2 ram | |
650 | 4 | |a Écologie forestière | |
650 | 4 | |a Ökologie | |
650 | 4 | |a Forest insects |x Ecology | |
650 | 4 | |a Insect-plant relationships | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804128044554649600 |
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adam_text | Titel: Insects and forests
Autor: Dajoz, Roger
Jahr: 2000
Contents
Introduction.................................................................................................... 1
Chapter 1 ¦¦¦ STRUCTURE AND EVOLUTION OF
TEMPERATE FORESTS
1. Forests in western Europe........................................................................5
2. Different types of forest in France...........................................................6
3. The main forest tree species.....................................................................7
3.1. Conifers..............................................................................................8
3.2. Broadleaf trees.....................................................................................8
4. North American and European forests.....................................................9
5. The roles of forest.................................................................................. 10
6. Natural forests and managed forests...................................................... 10
Chapter 2 MM THE FOREST ENVIRONMENT:
EFFECTS OF ABIOTIC FACTORS
1. Forest climate and its influence on insects.............................................17
1.1. Light................................................................................................. 18
1.2. Temperature....................................................................................... 18
1.3. Rainfall and relative humidity.............................................................24
1.4. Wind.................................................................................................26
1.5. Spatial distribution of insects in forest..................................................28
I 2. Microclimates of foliage and tree trunks...............................................31
§ 3. Seasonal climatic variations and insect phenology.................................35
f 3.1. Phenology of insects in a beech wood..................................................35
8 3.2. Phenology of beetles in an oak wood...................................................36
£ 4. Fire: a little known ecological factor.....................................................36
| 5. Edge effect and area effect.....................................................................40
1 5.1. Edge effect........................................................................................40
^ 5.2. Effects of area and of isolation............................................................43
3 5.3. Practical consequences........................................................................47
!r 5.4. Hedgerow, a faunal reserve and corridor..............................................47
IV Insects and forests
Chapter 3 ¦¦¦ THE ROLE OF BIOTIC FACTORS
1. Insect / tree relationships........................................................................55
1.1. Diet diversity.....................................................................................56
1.2. The concept of palatability..................................................................57
1.3. Effects of levels of nitrogen compounds...............................................59
1.4. The defensive role of secondary plant compounds.................................60
1.5. Interactions between endophytic fungi and mining Lepidoptera.............66
1.6. Other defence strategies in trees..........................................................66
1.7. Demes and physiological races............................................................67
1.8. Inducible defences..............................................................................69
1.9. Are there pheromone-type reactions between trees?..............................74
2. Insect relationships modulated by plants...............................................75
3. Competition and resource sharing..........................................................75
4. The role of predators and parasites........................................................80
4.1. Predators...........................................................................................81
4.2. Parasites and parasitoids.....................................................................87
5. Survival curves.......................................................................................89
Chapter 4. ¦¦¦ DIVERSITY AND ABUNDANCE OF INSECTS
IN FOREST
1. Ecological diversity.............................................................................. 101
2. Species diversity.................................................................................. 103
2.1. Effects of structural diversity of vegetation......................................... 104
2.2. Effects of distributional range of trees................................................ 104
2.3. Effects of the age of a population....................................................... 106
2.4. Speed of colonisation........................................................................ 109
2.5. Effects of geographical latitude......................................................... 109
3. Biodiversity, abundance, and body size............................................... 112
3.1. Relationships between abundance and numbers of species................... 112 g
3.2. Relationships between size and number of species.............................. 113 f
3.3. Relationships between abundance and distribution range..................... 113 «j
4. Species-richness of forest insect fauna................................................114 |
5. Numerical abundance and biomass......................................................115 I
€
S
Chapter 5 ¦§¦¦ INSECTS AND THE FOREST ECOSYSTEM I
c
13
1. The role of defoliating insects.............................................................. 122 g
1.1. Quantity of foliage consumed............................................................123 ¦*
1.2. Leaf-eating insects as regulators of primary production....................... 124 %
Contents V
2. Trophic networks and energy fluxes.................................................... 128
2.1. The role of phytophagous organisms in trophic networks..................... 128
2.2. Trophic networks and productivity in an English oak wood................. 130
2.3. Energetics of hazel defoliators........................................................... 132
2.4. A forest food-chain........................................................................... 132
2.5. The role of xylophagous insects......................................................... 133
Chapter 6 ¦¦¦ FOREST INSECT PESTS
1. Types of damage.................................................................................. 139
2. Main pests of European forests............................................................ 141
2.1. Indigenous species............................................................................ 141
2.2. Introduced species............................................................................ 143
3. Effects of insects on tree growth.......................................................... 147
4. Primary and secondary pests................................................................ 151
5. Population dynamics of forest insects.................................................. 152
6. Why do some insects become pests?................................................... 154
6.1. Drought........................................................................................... 155
6.2. Atmospheric pollution...................................................................... 158
6.3. Consequences of global change......................................................... 163
7. Forest pest control................................................................................ 165
7.1. Chemical control.............................................................................. 166
7.2. Biological control............................................................................. 168
7.3. Integrated control............................................................................. 176
7.4. Use of fertilisers............................................................................... 177
7.5. The search for resistant varieties........................................................ 178
7.6. Forestry methods.............................................................................. 179
Chapter 7 ¦¦¦ CANOPY INSECTS
I 1. Guild structure of canopy arthropods................................................... 196
c
•| 2. Species diversity and population structure of canopy arthropods....... 197
I 2.1. Canopy fauna of Aleppo pine............................................................ 197
| 2.2. Canopy fauna of Japanese red cedar (Cryptomeria japonica)............... 198
£ 2.3. Canopy fauna of a beech wood.......................................................... 199
1 2.4. Canopy fauna of cork oak and downy oak..........................................200
§ 3. Evolution of canopy fauna.................................................................. 202
8 4. Epiphyte fauna.....................................................................................202
,2 5. A special habitat: bark..........................................................................204
VI Insects and forests
Chapter 8 HM DEFOLIATING LEPIDOPTERA
1. Consequences of defoliation................................................................209
2. Diversity of defoliating Lepidoptera....................................................212
3. Some species on broadleaf trees..........................................................221
3.1. The oak leaf roller moth....................................................................221
3.2. The gypsy moth...............................................................................225
3.3. The winter moth...............................................................................229
4. Some species on conifers.....................................................................232
4.1. The larch bud moth..........................................................................232
4.2. The pine looper moth........................................................................236
4.3. The pine shoot moth.........................................................................238
Chapter 9 ^Mi PROCESSIONARY CATERPILLARS
1. The pine processionary caterpillar.......................................................245
1.1. Life cycle........................................................................................245
1.2. Processions and social life of caterpillars............................................250
1.3. Predators and parasitoids...................................................................251
1.4. Control of the pine processionary caterpillar.......................................254
2. The oak processionary caterpillar........................................................254
2.1. Life cycle........................................................................................254
2.2. Predators and parasitoids...................................................................255
2.3. Control of the oak processionary caterpillar........................................256
Chapter 10 MM1 OTHER DEFOLIATORS: SAWFLIES,
BEETLES, FLIES
l.Sawflies................................................................................................259
1.1 .Sawflies of broadleaf trees.................................................................260
1.2. Sawflies of conifers..........................................................................260
1.3. Diprionid sawflies............................................................................262
2. Beetles (Coleoptera).............................................................................269
2.1. Leaf beetles (Chrysomelidae)............................................................270
2.2. Weevils (Curculionidae)...................................................................270
2.3. Chafers (Scarabaeidae) ....................................................................273
3. Flies (Diptera)..................................................................................... 274
3.1. Agevillea abietis...............................................................................274
3.2. Thecodtplosis brachyntera................................................................274
3.3. Cecidomyia pilosa............................................................................275
Contents VII
Chapter 11 ¦¦¦¦ SAP-SUCKERS: SCALE INSECTS,
APHIDS AND BUGS
1. Scale insects.........................................................................................279
1.1. Some common scale insects..............................................................280
1.2. Matsucoccus fevtaudiand maritime pine wilt......................................280
1.3. Matsucoccuspini..............................................................................289
1.4. Cryptococcus fagisuga and beech wilt................................................289
2. Aphids..................................................................................................293
2.1. The woolly beech aphid, Phyilaphis fagi............................................296
2.2. The green spruce aphid, Elatobium abietinum ....................................297
2.3. The sycamore aphid, Drepanosiphum platanoides..............................297
3. Other Homoptera..................................................................................298
4. True bugs (Heteroptera).......................................................................300
5. A special habitat: sap flux....................................................................301
Chapter 12 ¦¦¦¦1 GALLS AND GALL INSECTS
1. Cynipid gall wasps of oaks..................................................................308
X.l.Biorrhizapallida..............................................................................308
1.2. Neiiroterus lenticularis.....................................................................310
1.3. Distribution of Neuroterus galls.........................................................312
1.4. Andricus kollari...............................................................................312
1.5. Andricus fecundator.........................................................................312
1.6. Cynipid galls as micro-ecosystems.....................................................314
2. Chermesid aphids.................................................................................315
2.1. Species of the genus Dreyfusia..........................................................317
2.2. Species of the genus Sacchiphantes...................................................321
2.3. Gilletteella cooleyi...........................................................................322
2.4. Species of the genus Pineus...............................................................322
2.5. Formation and structure of chermesid galls.........................................323
3. Other gall Homopterans.......................................................................324
3.1.Phylloxerids.....................................................................................324
3.2. Pemphigids......................................................................................325
4. Gall midges..........................................................................................327
5. Other gall insects..................................................................................330
Chapter 13 ¦¦¦¦ INSECTS ON FLOWERS, FRUITS AND SEEDS
1. Importance of fruits and seeds in the forest environment....................333
1.1. Variability in fruit and seed production .............................................334
VIII Insects and forests
1.2. Prolonged diapause..........................................................................335
1.3. Economic importance of pests of fruits and seeds................................337
2. Flower-eating insects...........................................................................338
3. Conifer cone insects.............................................................................338
3.1. Biological diversity .........................................................................338
3.2. The concept of merocenose...............................................................339
3.3. Variations in species-richness............................................................341
3.4. Merocenose of Scots pine cones........................................................343
3.5. Insects on spruce, fir and larch cones.................................................345
4. Insects on acorns, beechnuts and other broadleaf tree seeds...............346
4.1. Faunal successions in decomposing acorns.........................................346
4.2. Beechnuts........................................................................................347
4.3. Some insects on fruits and seeds of broadleaf trees.............................347
Chapter 14 ¦¦¦ WOOD AND ITS USE BY XYLOPHAGOUS
ORGANISMS
1. Wood: chemical characteristics............................................................352
1.1. Cellulose.........................................................................................353
1.2. Hemicelluloses.................................................................................355
1.3. Lignin.............................................................................................356
1.4. Secondary components.....................................................................356
2. Structure of the xylem cell....................................................................357
3. Importance of wood in the forest ecosystem.......................................358
4. Digestion of wood by insects...............................................................359
4.1. Digestion of cellulose.......................................................................359
4.2. Digestion of lignin............................................................................364
4.3. Digestion of hemicelluloses and other components of wood.................364
5. The role of symbiotic micro-organisms...............................................366
5.1. Symbiotes of the digestive tract.........................................................366
5.2. Ectosymbiotic organisms..................................................................367 |
5.3. The role of endosymbiotes................................................................370 |
6. The role of lignivorous fungi ..............................................................370 g
6.1. Enzymes of fungi.............................................................................372 g
6.2. Different types of attack on wood......................................................372 S
D
__ I
Chapter 15 m^ BARK BEETLES (SCOLYTIDAE) AND THEIR 1
ASSOCIATED FAUNA I
i
o
o
i. Morphology and anatomy of scolytids.................................................379 %
1.1. Diet.................................................................................................383 £
Contents IX
1.2. Different types of gallery..................................................................384
2. Colonisation of trees............................................................................386
2.1. Primary attraction.............................................................................386
2.2. Secondary attraction and aggregation pheromones..............................389
3. Biology of some scolytid species.........................................................404
3.1. Elm bark beetles...............................................................................404
3.2. Pteleobius vittatus and the genus Leperesinus.....................................407
3.3. Tomicus piniperda, the large pine shoot beetle....................................407
3.4. Ips typographus, the engraver beetle..................................................409
3.5. Ips sexdentatus.................................................................................410
3.6. Ips acuminatus.................................................................................410
i.l.Hylastesater....................................................................................412
3.8. Pityokteines curvidens, the fir engraver beetle.....................................412
3.9. Trypodendron lineatum.....................................................................412
3.10. Dendroctonus micans......................................................................413
3.11. American species of the genus Dendroctonus...................................415
3.12. The genus Xyleborus.......................................................................416
4. Biology of some platypodids and curculionids....................................417
4.1. Platypus cylindrus............................................................................417
4.2. Xylophagous curculionids.................................................................417
5. Commensals, predators and parasites of bark beetles..........................421
5.1. Bacteria, fungi and protozoans...........................................................425
5.2. Nematodes (Nematoda).....................................................................426
5.3. Mites (Acarina)................................................................................426
5.4. True flies (Diptera)...........................................................................427
5.5. Wasps (Hymenoptera)......................................................................428
5.6. Beetles (Coleoptera).........................................................................428
5.7. True bugs (Heteroptera)....................................................................433
Chapter 16 ¦¦¦ SAPROXYLIC INSECTS
1. Diversity of saproxylic Coleoptera......................................................444
l.l.Cerambycids....................................................................................444
1.2. Buprestids........................................................................................456
1.3. Anobiids..........................................................................................458
1.4. Bostrychids......................................................................................461
1.5. Curculionids....................................................................................462
1.6. Lyctids............................................................................................463
1.7. Lymexylonids..................................................................................463
1.8. Scarabaeoidea..................................................................................463
1.9. Other families of xylophagous beetles................................................468
1.10. Non-xylophagous saproxylic beetles................................................471
Insects and forests
1. Diversity of saproxylic flies (Diptera).................................................474
2.1. Nematocera......................................................................................475
2.2. Brachycera.......................................................................................477
2.3. Cyclorrhapha...................................................................................480
3. Saproxylic Hymenoptera......................................................................482
3.1. Siricid wasps....................................................................................482
3.2. Ants................................................................................................485
4. Xylophagous moths..............................................................................486
4.1.Cossids............................................................................................486
4.2. Tortricids.........................................................................................487
4.3. Sesiids.............................................................................................487
5. Termites................................................................................................487
Chapter 17 ¦¦¦ WOOD DECAY AND INSECT SUCCESSIONS
1. Examples of successions in temperate regions....................................496
1.1. Successions in pine and oak..............................................................497
1.2. Successions in beech........................................................................499
1.3. Successions in fir.............................................................................501
1.4. Conifers of boreal forests..................................................................502
1.5. Successions in Douglas-fir................................................................504
1.6. Successions of Diptera in beech.........................................................506
2. Examples of successions in the tropics................................................506
2.1. Decay of pines in Guatemala.............................................................506
2.2. Decay of dead trees in Mexico...........................................................507
2.3. Wood decay in Puerto Rico...............................................................507
2.4. Fauna of borassus palm in the Ivory Coast..........................................508
3. Successions and tree age......................................................................509
Chapter 18 ¦¦¦ TWO SPECIAL HABITATS: TREE HOLES
AND FUNGI
1. Tree holes.............................................................................................515 I
o
1.1. Water-filled holes or dendrotelms......................................................515 f
1.2. Dry holes filled with wood mould......................................................516 g
2. Fungi and their associated fauna...........................................................522 I
2.1. Diet and biology of mycetophagous insects........................................523 i
2.2. The main mycetophagous insects.......................................................526 g
2.3. Faunal successions...........................................................................528 t
Contents XI
Chapter 19 ^^ INSECTS OF FOREST SOILS
1. Soil insects of a spruce forest...............................................................537
2. Collembola...........................................................................................538
3. Diptera..................................................................................................539
4. Coleoptera............................................................................................540
4.1.Carabidae........................................................................................540
4.2. Other families..................................................................................542
5. Hymenoptera........................................................................................542
6. Orthopteroids.......................................................................................542
Chapter 20 ^H NORTH AMERICAN FOREST INSECTS
1. Some characteristics of North American forests..................................545
1.1. Boreal forest....................................................................................545
1.2. Eastern deciduous forest...................................................................545
1.3. Pacific northern forest .............................................................................545
2. Canopy arthropods of North American forests....................................546
3. Defoliating insects................................................................................549
3.1. Lepidoptera...............................................................................................551
3.2. Hymenoptera............................................................................................559
4. Seed and cone insects...........................................................................559
4.1. Lepidoptera......................................................................................561
4.2. Hymenoptera...................................................................................561
4.3. Diptera......................................................................................................561
4.4. Coleoptera.................................................................................................561
5. Insects that attack buds and shoots......................................................562
5.1. A case-study: the white pine weevil Pissodes strobi............................562
5.2. Other bud and shoot species..............................................................564
g 6. Sap-sucking and gall-forming insects..................................................565
| 6.1. Sap-sucking insects..........................................................................565
™ 6.2. Gall-forming insects.........................................................................565
I 7. Phloem- and wood-boring insects........................................................566
I 7.1. Scolytidae (bark beetles)...................................................................566
f 7.2. Cerambycidae and Buprestidae................................................................574
I Chapter 21 ¦¦¦ TROPICAL RAIN FOREST INSECTS
I 1. The study of insects - past and present................................................583
jr 2. Species diversity and abundance..........................................................585
XII Insects and forests
2.1. Biodiversity.....................................................................................585
2.2. Latitudinal gradient..........................................................................591
2.3. Altitudinal gradient...................................................................................593
2.4. Abundance and importance of insects......................................................597
2.5. Seasonal and daily variations...................................................................598
2.6. Stratification of the fauna.........................................................................602
2.7. Why so many species?..............................................................................604
2.8. Diversity, endemism and indicator taxa...................................................608
3. Fragmentation and disruption of tropical forests.................................610
3.1. How many species are lost?......................................................................610
3.2. Effects of fragmentation on some insects.................................................611
4. The main insects of tropical forests.....................................................617
4.1. Ants................................................................................................617
4.2. Termites..........................................................................................620
4.3. Coleoptera.................................................................................................624
4.4. Collembola................................................................................................630
4.5. Lepidoptera...............................................................................................631
4.6. Orthoptera.................................................................................................633
5. Insect / plant relationships in tropical forest........................................634
5.1. Insects as pollinators.........................................................................634
5.2. Two examples of mutualism and coevolution.....................................636
5.3. Plant defences and phytophagous insects.................................................637
6. Some examples of tropical forest insect communities.........................637
6.1. An arboreal community of beetles in Brunei.......................................638
6.2. Communities of Coleoptera in a lowland forest in Borneo...................639
6.3. Beetle fauna of a rain forest in Sulawesi.............................................640
6.4. Arthropods in a lowland forest in Cameroon.......................................642
6.5. Canopy arthropod diversity in a New Caledonian primary forest...........643
Conclusion
Insect fauna and forest management........................................................659 J
6
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a
Index of insect taxa......................................................................................661 |
8
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|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Dajoz, Roger |
author_facet | Dajoz, Roger |
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discipline | Biologie Forstwissenschaft Agrar-/Forst-/Ernährungs-/Haushaltswissenschaft / Gartenbau |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV013277417 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T18:42:59Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 1898298688 |
language | English French |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-009052260 |
oclc_num | 45240460 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-M49 DE-BY-TUM DE-Eb1 |
owner_facet | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-M49 DE-BY-TUM DE-Eb1 |
physical | XII, 668 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2000 |
publishDateSearch | 2000 |
publishDateSort | 2000 |
publisher | Intercept Limited |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Dajoz, Roger Verfasser aut Les insectes et la forêt Insects and forests the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment Roger Dajoz London [u.a.] Intercept Limited 2000 XII, 668 S. Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Forêts - Parasites ram Insectes des forêts - Écologie ram Insectes forestiers Insectes forestiers - Europe de l'Ouest Insectes forestiers - Écologie Insectes nuisibles Insectes nuisibles ram Relations insecte-plante ram Écologie des forêts ram Écologie forestière Ökologie Forest insects Ecology Insect-plant relationships Insects Ecology Waldinsekten (DE-588)4188983-6 gnd rswk-swf Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 gnd rswk-swf Waldökosystem (DE-588)4282537-4 gnd rswk-swf Ökologie (DE-588)4043207-5 gnd rswk-swf Waldinsekten (DE-588)4188983-6 s Ökologie (DE-588)4043207-5 s DE-604 Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 s Waldökosystem (DE-588)4282537-4 s HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009052260&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Dajoz, Roger Insects and forests the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment Forêts - Parasites ram Insectes des forêts - Écologie ram Insectes forestiers Insectes forestiers - Europe de l'Ouest Insectes forestiers - Écologie Insectes nuisibles Insectes nuisibles ram Relations insecte-plante ram Écologie des forêts ram Écologie forestière Ökologie Forest insects Ecology Insect-plant relationships Insects Ecology Waldinsekten (DE-588)4188983-6 gnd Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 gnd Waldökosystem (DE-588)4282537-4 gnd Ökologie (DE-588)4043207-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4188983-6 (DE-588)4027110-9 (DE-588)4282537-4 (DE-588)4043207-5 |
title | Insects and forests the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment |
title_alt | Les insectes et la forêt |
title_auth | Insects and forests the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment |
title_exact_search | Insects and forests the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment |
title_full | Insects and forests the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment Roger Dajoz |
title_fullStr | Insects and forests the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment Roger Dajoz |
title_full_unstemmed | Insects and forests the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment Roger Dajoz |
title_short | Insects and forests |
title_sort | insects and forests the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment |
title_sub | the role and diversity of insects in the forest environment |
topic | Forêts - Parasites ram Insectes des forêts - Écologie ram Insectes forestiers Insectes forestiers - Europe de l'Ouest Insectes forestiers - Écologie Insectes nuisibles Insectes nuisibles ram Relations insecte-plante ram Écologie des forêts ram Écologie forestière Ökologie Forest insects Ecology Insect-plant relationships Insects Ecology Waldinsekten (DE-588)4188983-6 gnd Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 gnd Waldökosystem (DE-588)4282537-4 gnd Ökologie (DE-588)4043207-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Forêts - Parasites Insectes des forêts - Écologie Insectes forestiers Insectes forestiers - Europe de l'Ouest Insectes forestiers - Écologie Insectes nuisibles Relations insecte-plante Écologie des forêts Écologie forestière Ökologie Forest insects Ecology Insect-plant relationships Insects Ecology Waldinsekten Insekten Waldökosystem |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009052260&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT dajozroger lesinsectesetlaforet AT dajozroger insectsandforeststheroleanddiversityofinsectsintheforestenvironment |