1810年印度蠓目名录(鞘翅目:蠓科)

IF 0.7 Q4 ENTOMOLOGY
Raj T. Shiju, T. Sabu
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Among the 129 Indian subcontinent species, 45 species are endemics to the three global hotspots of the biodiversity in India with 31 species endemic to the Western Ghats and Sri Lanka hotspot of biodiversity; six species endemic to the Eastern Himalayas hotspot of biodiversity; eight species endemic to the Indo-Burma hotspot of biodiversity; four species recorded only from Chota Nagpur plateu and 27 species recorded only from Indian Himalayas. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文介绍了印度报道的263种Lebiinae的分布格局和文献资料。该名单包括14种被Andrewes (1930a)遗漏的物种和98种后来被描述的物种。263种中,东洋特有种104种,古北特有种35种。在263种印度种中,130种是印度独有的物种,仅在印度次大陆有报道,1种仅在安达曼和尼科巴群岛有报道。在印度的130种中,有89种来自东方,27种来自古北,14种来自东方和古北地区。129种印度次大陆物种中,印度3个全球生物多样性热点地区特有45种,西高止山脉和斯里兰卡生物多样性热点地区特有31种;东喜马拉雅生物多样性热点地区特有的6种;印度-缅甸生物多样性热点地区特有的8种;4种仅在高塔那格浦尔高原记录,27种仅在印度喜马拉雅山脉记录。仅在Chota Nagpur高原记录的4种(Microlestes parvati, Singilis indicus, S. squalidus和Lebia cardoni)和来自西高止山脉和斯里兰卡的31种特有种因其冈瓦纳关系而特别令人感兴趣。133种具有较宽的地理分布格局,其中15种分布于东方和印度地区;分布于古大陆和印度地区的8种;在东方和印度-澳大利亚地区分布的10种;48种,分布于东方和古北地区;29种,分布于东方、印度-澳大利亚和古北地区;2种,分布于东方、澳大利亚和古北地区;6种,分布于东方、古北和非洲热带地区;9种,分布于东方、印度-澳大利亚、澳大利亚和古北地区;6种,在不同地区随机分布。分布记录表明,228种物种的到来/起源可能发生在印度次大陆与亚洲大陆合并之后,以及随后在新形成的印度次大陆与周边地区(东北前线的印缅和印中)之间的动物交换期间,其中137种在印度以外的地理分布范围更广,91种在印度分布,并非西高止山脉和高塔纳布尔高原特有;西北前线的地中海和埃塞俄比亚地区;北线的中亚元素)。这228种代表了年轻的印度Lebiinae物种,而35种代表了冈瓦纳陆地起源的更古老/古老的物种。关键词:Carabidae, Lebiinae, Perigonini, Pentagonicini, Odacanthini, Cyclosomini, Lebiini,印度
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Checklist of Indian Lebiinae Bonelli, 1810 (Coleoptera: Carabidae)
Distribution patterns and literature details of 263 Lebiinae species reported from India are provided. List includes 14 species missed out by Andrewes (1930a) and the 98 species described thereafter. Distribution patterns revealed among the 263 species, 104 species are exclusively Oriental species and 35 species are exclusively Palaearctic species. Among the 263 Indian speceis, 130 species are exclusively Indian species with reports only from the Indian subcontinent and one species with report only from Andaman & Nicobar Islands. Of the 130 Indian species,  89 species are recorded from the Oriental, 27 species from the Palaearctic and 14 species recorded from both Oriental and Palaearctic regions in India. Among the 129 Indian subcontinent species, 45 species are endemics to the three global hotspots of the biodiversity in India with 31 species endemic to the Western Ghats and Sri Lanka hotspot of biodiversity; six species endemic to the Eastern Himalayas hotspot of biodiversity; eight species endemic to the Indo-Burma hotspot of biodiversity; four species recorded only from Chota Nagpur plateu and 27 species recorded only from Indian Himalayas. Four species (Microlestes parvati, Singilis indicus, S. squalidus and Lebia cardoni) recorded only from Chota Nagpur plateu and the 31 endemic species from the Western Gahts and Sri Lanka are of special interest for their Gondwana relationships. 133 species have wider geographic distribution pattern with 15 species having distribution in Oriental and Indian regions; 8 species having distribution in Palaeractic and Indian regions; 10 species having distribution in Oriental and Indo-Australian regions; 48 species with distribution in Oriental and Palaearctic regions; 29 species with distribution in Oriental, Indo-Australian and Palaearctic regions; 2 species with distribution in Oriental, Australian and Palaearctic regions; 6 species with distribution in Oriental, Palaearctic and Afrotropical regions; 9 species with distribution in Oriental, Indo-Australian, Australian and Palaearctic regions; and 6 species with random distributions in different regions. Distribution records indicate that the arrival/origin of 228 species- 137 species with wider geographic distribution outside India and the 91 species with Indian distribution and not endemics to the Western Ghats and the Chotanagpur Plateau- is likely to have occurred after the joining of Indian subcontinent with Asian continent and during the subsequent faunal exchange between the newly formed Indian subcontinent and the surrounding regions (Indo-Burma and Indo-China on the north east front; Mediterranean and Ethiopian regions on the north-western front; Central Asian elements on the northern front). These 228 species represent the younger Indian Lebiinae species compared to the 35 species representing the older/ancient species with Gondwana land origin. Key words: Carabidae, Lebiinae, Perigonini, Pentagonicini, Odacanthini, Cyclosomini, Lebiini, India  
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来源期刊
Journal of Insect Biodiversity
Journal of Insect Biodiversity Environmental Science-Ecology
CiteScore
1.10
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