Long-term studies are key to understand the drivers of biodiversity erosion, such as land-use change and habitat degradation, climate change, invasive species or pollution. The long-term project SLAM (Long Term Ecological Study of the Impacts of Climate Change in the natural forest of Azores) started in 2012 and focuses on arthropod monitoring, using SLAM (Sea, Land and Air Malaise) traps, aiming to understand the impact of the drivers of biodiversity erosion on Azorean native forests (Azores, Portugal). This is the fourth contribution including SLAM project data and the second focused on the spider fauna (Arachnida, Araneae) of native forests on two islands (Pico and Terceira). In this contribution, we describe data collected between 2019 ...
Copyright © 2008 The Natural History Museum.In this contribution, we report on patterns of spider sp...
Background The data presented here come from samples collected as part of two recent research projec...
During the last few centuries oceanic island biodiversity has been drastically modified by human-med...
Long-term studies are key to understand the drivers of biodiversity erosion, such as land-use change...
Long-term monitoring of invertebrate communities is needed to understand the impact of key biodivers...
A long-term study monitoring arthropods (Arthropoda) is being conducted since 2012 in the forests of...
Background A long-term study monitoring arthropods (Arthropoda) is being conducted since 2012 in the...
The data we present are part of the long-term project "SLAM Project - Long Term Ecological Study of ...
The data we present are part of the long-term project SLAM (Long Term Ecological Study of the Impact...
The data we present hereafter are part of the long-term project SLAM (Long Term Ecological Study of ...
The data we present consist of an inventory of exotic arthropods, potentially invasive, collected in...
The data presented here come from samples collected as part of two recent research projects (NETBIOM...
Background The sharp increase in tourist visitation of the Azores Archipelago from 2015 onwards rais...
BACKGROUND: In this contribution we present detailed distribution and abundance data for arthropod s...
Since 2012 we are conducting in Azorean Islands (Portugal) native and exotic forests a long-term mon...
Copyright © 2008 The Natural History Museum.In this contribution, we report on patterns of spider sp...
Background The data presented here come from samples collected as part of two recent research projec...
During the last few centuries oceanic island biodiversity has been drastically modified by human-med...
Long-term studies are key to understand the drivers of biodiversity erosion, such as land-use change...
Long-term monitoring of invertebrate communities is needed to understand the impact of key biodivers...
A long-term study monitoring arthropods (Arthropoda) is being conducted since 2012 in the forests of...
Background A long-term study monitoring arthropods (Arthropoda) is being conducted since 2012 in the...
The data we present are part of the long-term project "SLAM Project - Long Term Ecological Study of ...
The data we present are part of the long-term project SLAM (Long Term Ecological Study of the Impact...
The data we present hereafter are part of the long-term project SLAM (Long Term Ecological Study of ...
The data we present consist of an inventory of exotic arthropods, potentially invasive, collected in...
The data presented here come from samples collected as part of two recent research projects (NETBIOM...
Background The sharp increase in tourist visitation of the Azores Archipelago from 2015 onwards rais...
BACKGROUND: In this contribution we present detailed distribution and abundance data for arthropod s...
Since 2012 we are conducting in Azorean Islands (Portugal) native and exotic forests a long-term mon...
Copyright © 2008 The Natural History Museum.In this contribution, we report on patterns of spider sp...
Background The data presented here come from samples collected as part of two recent research projec...
During the last few centuries oceanic island biodiversity has been drastically modified by human-med...