Mo Singto Long Term Ecological Research plot (barking deer)
Basic information
Sample name: Mo Singto Long Term Ecological Research plot (barking deer)

Sample aka: Khao Yai National Park

Reference: R. W. Sites, P. Lago, and G. A. Gale. 2018. Associations of scarab beetles (Insecta: Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) with dung of four species of mammals in Khao Yai National Park, Thailand. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 66:87-95 [ER 2780]
Geography
Country: Thailand

State: Nakhon Nayok



Coordinate: 14° 26' N, 101° 22' E
Coordinate basis: stated in text

Geography comments: "in the Mo Singto Long Term Ecological Research plot, Khao Yai National Park"
elevation 725 to 815 m

Environment
Habitat: tropical/subtropical dry broadleaf forest

Protection: national/state park

Substrate: ground surface

MAT: 22.5

WMT: 29.0

CMT: 19.0

MAP: 2200.0

Habitat comments: "closed-canopy, seasonal evergreen forest... The rainy season is from May to October whereas the remaining months are relatively dry... There is little evidence of human disturbance except for the presence of secondary forest about 25 years old on the north side of the plot"
MAT "22-23ÂșC"

Methods
Life forms: scarab beetles

Sampling methods: quadrat,baited,pitfall traps

Sample size: 103 individuals

Years: 2010

Days: 1

Nets or traps: 9

Sampling comments: "Baited pitfall traps were set out in the afternoon of 23 March 2010 and left for 24 hours... The sampling design was a 5 x 8 completely randomised design with the two deer species each represented by an additional pitfall, and 20 meters between each pitfall. Thus, 8-9 traps of each dung type were established along with 8 unbaited control trap"

Metadata
Sample number: 2995

Contributor: John Alroy

Enterer: John Alroy

Created: 2018-06-03 19:17:06

Modified: 2018-06-03 09:17:06

Abundance distribution
9 species
3 singletons
total count 103
geometric series index: 16.7
Fisher's α: 2.372
geometric series k: 0.6214
Hurlbert's PIE: 0.6780
Shannon's H: 1.4217
Good's u: 0.9711
Each square represents a species. Square sizes are proportional to counts.
Register