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During 2009–2011, in a faunistic survey of kerman province (Southeast of Iran), the mite fauna of Artemisia (Asteraceae) was investigated. Six species belonging to superfamily tetranychoidea were collected and identified. Artemisia aucheri (Asteraceae) is reported as a new host record for four species Bryobia chrysocomae Meyer, 1974; Strunkobia pamirica Livshitz & Mitrofanov, 1972; Bryobia tuttle is miley & Baker, 1995 and Tetranychus urticae Koch, 1836.
Two parasitoid wasps, Torymus artemisiae Mayr and Torymoides violaceus (Nikol’skaya), were reared on Artemisia herba-alba (Asteraceae) galles, in central Iran. Torymus artemisiae and T. violaceus were developed from the gall midges: Rhopalomyia navasi Tavares and R. hispanica Tavares, respectively. The occurrence of these two parasitic wasps in Iran, and their associations with R. navasi and R. hispanica, are new. Data on the wasps’ biological associations and geographical distribution are provided. The parasitoid compositions of the genus Rhopalomyia (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) were also discussed.
Medical observations show that the level of pollinosis increased by 34.6% in central Russia in 2005–2012. This paper presents the results of 6-year pollen monitoring carried out with a Hirst-type pollen trap (Burkard Manufacturing Co. Ltd) between 2010 and 2015 in Perm Krai (Russia). Usually, sensitization of allergic people occurs in three periods: (i) spring due to the pollen of Betula, (ii) early summer due to Poaceae pollen, and (iii) late summer as a result of Artemisia pollen. Betula pollen, which is dominant (26.9–65.2% of total pollen counts), is recorded in large numbers in the period of flowering and occasionally during the entire period of pollination. Among herbaceous plants, the pollen of Poaceae, Urticaceae and Artemisia dominates in airborne pollen. The concentration of allergenic pollen grains in the air of Perm Krai is lower than in other European geographical regions.
The predictive modeling of plant species distribution has wide applications in vegetation studies. This study attempts to assess three modeling approaches to predict the plant distribution in the dry (precipitation 128–275 mm) mountainous (altitude 1129–2260 m a.s.l.) scrub vegetation on the example of the rangelands of northeastern Semnan, Iran. The vegetation of the study area belongs to the communities of Artemisia, Astralagus, Eurotia and other scrub species. The main objective of this study is to compare the predictive ability of three habitat models, and to find the most effective environmental factors for predicting the plant species occurrence. The Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA), Logistic Regression (LR), and Artificial Neural Network (ANN) models were chosen to model the spatial distribution pattern of vegetation communities. Plant density and cover, soil texture, available moisture, pH, electrical conductivity (EC), organic matter, lime, gravel and gypsum contents and topography (elevation, slope and aspect) are those variables that have been sampled using the randomized systematic method. Within each vegetation type, the samples were collected using 15 quadrates placed at an interval of 50 m along three 750 m transects. As a necessary step, the maps of all factors affecting the predictive capability of the models were generated. The results showed that the predictive models using the LR and ANN methods are more suitable to predict the distribution of individual species. In opposite, the CCA method is more suitable to predict the distribution of the all studied species together. Using the finalized models, maps of individual species (for different species) or for all the species were generated in the GIS environment. To evaluate the predictive ability of the models, the accuracy of the predicted maps was compared against real-world vegetation maps using the Kappa statistic. The Kappa (κ) statistic was also used to evaluate the adequacy of vegetation mapping. The comparison between the vegetation cover of a map generated using the CCA application and its corresponding actual map showed a good agreement (i.e. κ= 0.58). The results also revealed that maps generated using the LR and ANN models for Astragalus spp., Halocnemum strobilaceum, Zygophyllum eurypterum and Seidlitzia rosmarinus species have a high accordance with their corresponding actual maps of the study area. Due to the high level of adaptability of Artemisia sieberi, allowing this specie to grow in most parts of the study area with relatively different habitat conditions, a predictive model for this species could not be fixed. In such cases, a set of predictive models may be used to formulate the environment-vegetation relationship. Finally, the predictive ability of the LR and ANN models for mapping Astragalus spp. was determined as κ = 0.86 and κ = 0.91 respectively, implying a very good agreement between predictions and observations. It is concluded that the combination of mod- elling of the local species distribution constitutes a promising future research area, which has the potentiality to enhance assessments and conservation planning of vegetation (like rangelands) based on predictive species models.
This paper presents the results of an analysis of pollen season patterns for taxa which show the strongest allergenic activity (alder, birch, grasses, and mugwort) in 2008 in the air over Wrocław and Olszanica. The study was carried out using the volumetric method (Burkard trap). The results show variation in pollen seasons between the analyzed localities. An attempt was made to find out in which of the sites in question – the urban site or the rural one – there was a greater risk of allergens of the selected plants. The results of the present study show that the alder, birch and grass pollen seasons in 2008 started and ended earlier in Wrocław, and maximum pollen concentrations were definitely lower. But the mugwort pollen season started earlier and ended much later in Olszanica, while maximum pollen concentration of this taxon was more than twice lower than in Wrocław. In 2008 in the investigated localities, the highest pollen concentrations of the plants in question occurred in the following months: alder in February, birch in April, grasses in June, while mugwort in August. In 2008 alder and birch pollen allergen risk was comparable in the investigated urban and rural environment. However, grass and mugwort pollen allergens posed a significantly greater threat in the rural environment than in Wrocław.
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