1992
DOI: 10.1007/bf02255246
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Species richness in some Neotropical (Costa Rica) and afrotropical (West Africa) lotic communities of Chironomidae (Diptera)

Abstract: Drift collections of pupal exuviae from 2nd-5th order streams of the Guanacaste National Park in Northwest Costa Rica and from 3rd-6th order streams of the West African countries of Guinea, Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone and Togo have revealed high community (alpha) and regional (beta) levels of species diversity.Samples have been processed from 13 streams of the Guanacaste N. P. including two, Quebrada Las Yeguitas (2 stations) and Rio Tempisquito, for which year-long series were available. A total of 266 species … Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…The latter pattern does not conform to the more generalized trend of greatest richness in the tropics for many groups of organisms, and Coffman (1989) has argued that a variety of factors contribute to the higher richness of lotic chironomids in mid-latitudes (see earlier text). However, it can also be expected that the apparent patterns of species richness of Chironomidae are largely the result of differing efforts to describe local faunas rather than actual biological patterns, and more recent studies of Costa Rican and West African streams support this conclusion (Coffman and de la Rosa, 1998;Coffman et al, 1992).…”
Section: Zoogeography and Endemicitymentioning
confidence: 76%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The latter pattern does not conform to the more generalized trend of greatest richness in the tropics for many groups of organisms, and Coffman (1989) has argued that a variety of factors contribute to the higher richness of lotic chironomids in mid-latitudes (see earlier text). However, it can also be expected that the apparent patterns of species richness of Chironomidae are largely the result of differing efforts to describe local faunas rather than actual biological patterns, and more recent studies of Costa Rican and West African streams support this conclusion (Coffman and de la Rosa, 1998;Coffman et al, 1992).…”
Section: Zoogeography and Endemicitymentioning
confidence: 76%
“…Consideration of these factors led him to predict highest species richness would occur in 3rd order, temperate, lowland streams in the Holarctic Region. However, in subsequent papers Coffman and de la Rosa (1998) reported 250 species from three streams in Costa Rica, and Coffman et al (1992) documented 299 species in 31 West African streams, including 175 species in a large river. Consequently, it is likely that regional species richness in some tropical streams approaches or exceeds richness in temperate lowland streams.…”
Section: Species/generic Diversitymentioning
confidence: 95%
“…, 2006). Second, the concordant taxa Tanytarsus / Caladomyia complex, Polypedilum and Pentaneura are among the most diverse, frequent and abundant genera in Neotropical streams (Coffman et al. , 1992; Roque & Trivinho‐Strixino, 2007; Roque et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although Coffman et al (1993) reported 266 species of chironomids from 13 streams in northwestern Costa Rica, based solely on pupal exuviae, none of those taxa have been supplied with an available name. Chironomid taxonomy relies mostly on characters of the male, especially the male genitalia, for species delimitation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%