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Table 2: Species Richness (S) and Number of Individuals (N) of Each Order of Flower-Visiting Insects in Male and Female Inflorescences From All Plots.
doi 10.7717/peerj.7464/table-2
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Table 1: Plot Characteristics of Nine Studied Oil Palm Fields With Different Tree Age, and Diversity of Oil Palm Flower-Visiting Insects Both From Male and Female Inflorescences.
Table 3: Generalized Linear Models Relating Species Richness and Abundance of Flower-Visiting Insects to Tree Age, Flower Type and Vegetation Diversity as Predictors.
Table 3: Non-Parametric Species-Richness Estimates Using an Abundance Based Species Richness Estimator, the Incidence Coverage Estimator (ICE) for (A) Flowering Plants and (B) Flower-Visiting Insects From 16 Plots in the Lowlands Greater Cape Floristic Region.
Table 2: Geographical Location, Number of Centaurea Spp. Individuals and Ratio Between Number of Individuals of Each Cytotype in the Three Sampling Plots Used for Analysing Microspatial Distribution.
Figure S1: Species Accumulation Curves of Flower-Visiting Insects Between
Table 2: Summary of All Bycatch Species Captured in Each Trap Type.
Figure 2: The Most Dominant Species of Flower-Visiting Insects in Oil Palm Plantation in Central Borneo, Indonesia.
Table 2: The Number of Individuals From Each Beetle Family, and All Families Combined, Collected in Bamboo Forests, Terra Firme Forests, Dry Season, Wet Season.
Communities of Oil Palm Flower-Visiting Insects: Investigating the Covariation of Elaeidobius Kamerunicus and Other Dominant Species
PeerJ
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