$ Parts of the biotope | 73
Nagy, 1947; Tischler, 1950), revealing that certain insects, due to their
ecological needs, under different climates may live in different habitats,
indicates that the species-specific factors that influence the composition of
zoocoenoses in different biotopes and oecuses, should not be ignored.
We can accept the assumption of a tight connection between animal
associations and biotopes, because the latter also brings particular life
conditions, and we can also see that the requirement for area of interest does
not make it possible to delimit the zoocoenoses based on space, declaring
that an animal association is what coexists at a given site. We have reached
the point where we can attempt to define the zoocoenosis.