Termites were surveyed at three altitudes (Brachystegia woodland at 1676 m and 1905 m, and Juniper woodland at 2210 m) in forests within the Nyika Plateau, northern Malawi. Sampling was by a standardized 100 m transect protocol. Termite diversity was highest in the mid‐altitude site and lowest in the Juniper forest. The assemblages were dominated by soil‐feeding termites in the Termitidae subfamilies Apicotermitinae and Termitinae, and included one new soldierless Apicotermitinae genus. The structure of the assemblages was clearly due to a mixture of altitudinal and site history factors. This was especially true of the lowest altitude forest where burning and other anthropogenic disturbance factors appear to have reduced termite diversity relative to the mid‐altitude site. The Nyika plateau shows a much higher diversity at mid‐altitudes than similar SE Asian sites, probably due to the larger area of highland in Africa than in SE Asia. In addition, the clade composition of the Nyika assemblages differs completely from that found at similar altitudes in SE Asia. This preliminary study supports the hypothesis that mid‐ to high‐ altitude assemblages in both SE Asia and Africa appear to be derived from depauperated random subsets of the lowland fauna rather than from clades specifically adapted to higher altitudes.
This paper reviews literature related to outdoor terminology as it is used within the languages of British English and Czech. It provides the background to the outdoors in the Czech Republic where terminology has adopted and adapted many English language outdoor terms. The paper analyses the differences and similarities between terms and deals with the problems associated with defining and explaining outdoor terms and translating the British English terms into Czech and vice versa. Semi structured interviews were conducted with British and Czech academic experts. The findings suggest that as the outdoor field develops there is a need for more understanding of the cultural, historical, and geographical differences between concepts" and terminology used in both English and non-English speaking countries, for example, the specific indigenous nature of the Czech turistika activities.
Most sports are attractive because they are almost unpredictable. The more the competitiveness of league teams, the harder to predict the games and as a result, that league will be more attractive. Message is: more attractive leagues= bigger audience= more attractive for sponsorship= more money in sport. Competitive balance (CB) refers to the balance in sport capabilities of teams. The aim of this paper was to compare the competitive balance between Super Rugby league named SANZAR, which consist of three nations (New Zealand, Australia and South Africa) and English Premiership Rugby League in 1996-2014 seasons and compare them. The data were secondary and collected from the final tables.It was used five models in this study: the three-club and five-club concentration ratio (C3 and C5) and C3/C5 index of competitive balance (C3ICB/C5ICB) were used to analyse the data. The less the index C3ICB/C5ICB and C3/C5 are, the more competitive balance is, and conversely. Standard deviation of game results, the ratio of actual and ideal standard deviation wins, numbers of winners and a placement in the k-th place.The results showed that the Salary cap in Premiership League does not work very effectively and the competitive balance is in last few seasons still worst and worst. Super Rugby has mirror position to Premiership. Last few years are the competitive balance on the right track. Comparison result is for Super Rugby strategy with involving more teams to the league.
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