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Butterfly Diversity Assessment in Protected Areas in Tripura, North Eastern India

Butterfly Diversity Assessment in Protected Areas in Tripura, North Eastern India Indo-Myanmar biodiversity hotspot is unique in having the highest number of endemic species of mammals, birds and amphibians among other animals in the tropical Asia. Whole of north eastern India is included in the Indo-Myanmar region. Several biodiversity reserves and sanctuaries have been established in this hotspot to protect the endemic flora and fauna. Biodiversity assessment of rare and endangered invertebrates from protected reserves has eluded so far. Therefore, a study on diversity of butterflies in four wildlife sanctuaries of Tripura, north eastern India, was conducted in four seasons of 2 years. Data revealed the occurrence of 151 species under 98 genera and 6 families from 2754 individuals. Recorded diversity comprised of 29 rare and 51 very rare species based on their low to very low abundance. Thirty-six of 151 species belonged to threatened categories protected by law. Gomati sanctuary, largest of the four, with primary evergreen tropical forests, showed high species richness and diversity and shared higher components of rare, very rare and threatened species in comparison to other three sanctuaries which showed a mix of moist and dry secondary deciduous forests. All the four reserves suffer from different degrees of human encroachments and face local extinction of rare taxa. These protected areas call for stricter enforcement of Indian wildlife protection act for the well-being of wild life inhabitants. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Proceedings of the Zoological Society Springer Journals

Butterfly Diversity Assessment in Protected Areas in Tripura, North Eastern India

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References (65)

Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
Copyright © Zoological Society, Kolkata, India 2019
Subject
Life Sciences; Life Sciences, general; Zoology; Animal Anatomy / Morphology / Histology; Animal Genetics and Genomics; Biodiversity; Conservation Biology/Ecology
ISSN
0373-5893
eISSN
0974-6919
DOI
10.1007/s12595-019-00300-x
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Indo-Myanmar biodiversity hotspot is unique in having the highest number of endemic species of mammals, birds and amphibians among other animals in the tropical Asia. Whole of north eastern India is included in the Indo-Myanmar region. Several biodiversity reserves and sanctuaries have been established in this hotspot to protect the endemic flora and fauna. Biodiversity assessment of rare and endangered invertebrates from protected reserves has eluded so far. Therefore, a study on diversity of butterflies in four wildlife sanctuaries of Tripura, north eastern India, was conducted in four seasons of 2 years. Data revealed the occurrence of 151 species under 98 genera and 6 families from 2754 individuals. Recorded diversity comprised of 29 rare and 51 very rare species based on their low to very low abundance. Thirty-six of 151 species belonged to threatened categories protected by law. Gomati sanctuary, largest of the four, with primary evergreen tropical forests, showed high species richness and diversity and shared higher components of rare, very rare and threatened species in comparison to other three sanctuaries which showed a mix of moist and dry secondary deciduous forests. All the four reserves suffer from different degrees of human encroachments and face local extinction of rare taxa. These protected areas call for stricter enforcement of Indian wildlife protection act for the well-being of wild life inhabitants.

Journal

Proceedings of the Zoological SocietySpringer Journals

Published: Mar 28, 2020

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