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2022 | 44 | 308-315

Article title

Preliminary checklist of Moths (Insecta: Lepidoptera) and their role in maintenance of trophic chain of birds in Ecopark, West Bengal, India

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EN

Abstracts

EN
Ecopark Kolkata is a protected urban park of Kolkata West Bengal, having an area of approximately 480 acres. The study was conducted from May 2020 to April 2022. This study provides baseline data of moths in Ecopark, Kolkata. This is the first documentation and evaluation of the role of moths in the food web maintenance in birds, specially focused on an urban park in Kolkata. A total of 37 species under 12 families were reported in this present Survey. Of these, Crambidae shares maximum species 12 followed by Erebidae with 9 species; Noctuidae with 4 species; Zygaenidae, Sphingidae, Pyralidae each with 2 species and Uraniidae, Pterophoridae, Euteliidae, Geometridae, Nolidae, Limacodidae each with 1 species. The maximum number of the caterpillars of moth was found on Crotalaria retusa, Hymenocallis littoralis, Hiptage benghalensis, Ziziphus ziziphus, Moringa oleifera, Pithecellobium dulce, Lantana camara etc. Preference of food in between the resident birds also were found to be variable based on the bird species and the life stage of the moth and that in an urban park where vegetation and associated diversity is limited, moths can serve as a good supplementary food source for birds.

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Year

Volume

44

Pages

308-315

Physical description

Contributors

  • Nature Mates – Nature Club, 6/7, Bijoygarh, Kolkata 700032, West Bengal, India
  • Nature Mates – Nature Club, 6/7, Bijoygarh, Kolkata 700032, West Bengal, India
author
  • Nature Mates – Nature Club, 6/7, Bijoygarh, Kolkata 700032, West Bengal, India
author
  • Nature Mates – Nature Club, 6/7, Bijoygarh, Kolkata 700032, West Bengal, India
author
  • Department of Environmental Science, University of Calcutta, Kolkata 700019, West Bengal, India

References

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  • [2] Nadine Hilt and Konrad Fiedler. Arctiid moth ensembles along a successional gradient in the Ecuadorian montane rain forest zone: how different are subfamilies and tribes? Journal of Biogeography 33(1) (2006) 108-120
  • [3] T. R. New, Moths (Insecta: Lepidoptera) and conservation: background and perspective. Journal of Insect Conservation 8(2) (2004) 79-94
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  • [7] Frank Morton Jones, Insect coloration and the relative acceptability of insects to birds. Transactions of the Royal Entomological Society of London 80(2) (1932) 345-371
  • [8] Danae Wolfe, Moths: Food Chain Foundations. Insect insights. The American Gardener (2021) 38-39
  • [9] Maity P, Roy S, Chakraborti U, Biswas O, Ghosh J, Gayen AK, Mitra B, Insect faunal diversity of Salt Lake City–an urbanized area adjacent to Kolkata, India. Bioscience Discovery 7(2) (2016) 101-112
  • [10] Mitra B, Roy AB, Das A , Shah SK, Baidya S, Chaudhury DR, Mukherjee D, Panja B, Insect Faunal Diversity of Chintamani Kar Bird Sanctuary and Other Protected Areas of West Bengal. International Journal of Entomology Research 3(2) (2018) 180-189
  • [11] Shah SK, Mitra B, Das A, Mishra P, A report on Moth Fauna (Insecta: Lepidoptera) in Neora Valley National Park, West Bengal, India. Journal of Environment and Sociology 14(2) (2017) 179-186
  • [12] Sondhi S, Sondhi Y, Roy P, Kunte K (Chief Editors), Moths of India, v. 3.30. Indian Foundation for Butterflies. (2022) https://www.mothsofindia.org

Document Type

article

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bwmeta1.element.psjd-4cba870e-0416-4676-b1ab-a6885eeb868e
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