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022_000049/0000

Foundations of Agro-Zoocoenology

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Author
Gusztáv Szelényi
Field of science
Ökológia / Ecology (10733), Ökológia (elméleti és kísérleti, populáció, faj és közösségek szinten) / Ecology (theoretical and experimental: population, species and community level) (10734), Rovartan / Entomology (10704)
Type of publication
monográfia
022_000049/0080
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022_000049/0080

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§ Theoretical basis of the categorisation | 79 können deshalb stets nur durch ihren Tierbestand gekennzeichnet werden, nicht aber durch Vegetation Boden oder andere Standorts-faktoren”). This standpoint can easily spill over to the other extreme, separating the animal and the plant associations from each other. The greatest point of contention is due to authors who, without exception, use the characteristics of plant sociology to categorise animal associations, although these characteristics have a different importance. So, we break new ground when we try to dissect animal associations by their structure, and as structural elements of all animal associations, we identified four coeti (corrumpent, sustinent, intercalary, and obstant elements); for these categories, only three published terms show similarity. One ofthese is Deegener’s (1918) heterosynphagium that he used to name animals of different species that congregate on the same food (coprophages, flower visitors). This term is too narrow for intercalary elements (as more than just coprophages belong in this category), but too wide for sustinents (not all flower visitors are sustinents). Another term is Balogh’s (1946, 1953) syntrophium that was discussed already. The third is Elton’s niche (1927) that is identical with the coetus, and can be considered its English translation. There are minor points of difference between the two: Elton does not distinguish sustinents, and does not restrict the term to populations; he refers to species and, therefore, the niche has an idiobiological overtone. Otherwise, though, Elton also considers the niche a structural element of all zoocoenoses, as we do with the coetus (p. 63. “...although the actual species of animals are different in different habitats, the ground plan of every animal community is much the same”. “It is therefore convenient to have some term to describe the status of an animal in its community, to indicate what it is doing and not merely what it looks like, and the term used is »niche«...”; p. 64.: “The importance of studying niches is partly that it enables us to see how very different animal communities may resemble each other in the essential organisation”). These clear thoughts were written in vain, because zoocoenologists continue to describe “zoocoenoses” based on “dominance”, without considering the coetus aspect of populations. A zoocoenosis can only appear if it contains at least two coeti, and the most populous zoocoenosis can only contain four of them. By stating this, we are in opposition to authors who built animal associations considering plant layers (Brundin, 1934; Balogh, 1946, 1953; Tischler, 1947, 1950). We strongly disagree that levels of vegetation have any role in the structure of animal associations. Biorophs, being energy sources of different quality, bring new associational opportunities, but the structure of the animal associations of different vegetation layers is identical. A space becomes richer in zoocoenoses, rather than the zoocoenosis of a space growing richer.

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