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Reports on the status of Fundy National Park butterflies and related ecosystem, based mainly on sightings made in a May-September 1994 field study. Information is included on species observed, their life histories, and park habitats suitable for butterflies. Includes a check list of Fundy National Park butterflies, arranged by family and giving both scientific and common names.
Documents some recent advances in local knowledge of amphibians and reptiles in Fundy National Park. Includes background on herpetological surveys conducted in the park, reviews of amphibian egg mass surveys and rare salamander surveys, and discussion of interactions between amphibian populations and forestry activities. Synopses are provided for individual species, including information on species distribution, habitat, relative abundance, time of emergence, breeding season, life cycle behaviour, sightings, and environmental concerns. Species covered include mole salamanders, newts, lungless salamanders, toads, tree frogs, true frogs, and snakes.
Ecology, New Brunswick.
This report forms the introduction to a resource description and analysis of Fundy National Park. It proposes to place the management of the park in context for both researchers unfamiliar with the park and the region and for Parks Canada staff in search of background material on the park's natural resources. It reviews the goals of national parks in general and the Fundy park in particular; the degree of ecological integrity existing in the park; ecosystem management objectives; links between the park and partnerships in south-eastern New Brunswick (the Greater Fundy Ecosystem and the Fundy Model Forest), along with how they hope to benefit; and park and ecosystem management plans.
Ecology, New Brunswick.
Presents a checklist of the 634 moth species, in 14 selected families, identified from Fundy National Park and the immediately adjacent forests of the greater Fundy ecosystem. Species are arranged in the sequence of the most recent checklist (Hodges et al., 1983). All data are from light trap collections carried out over 1993-97. For each species, information provided includes number of successful trapping nights over that five-year period and the total number of individuals captured. Also included are the extreme flight dates for each species, summarized as the total number of days.
This report is an introduction to the results of a five-year co-operative study into the feasibility of using moths as biological indicators of ecosystem health in Fundy National Park, New Brunswick. The report describes the moth sampling methodology used, describes and maps the sampling site locations, and provides details of the floristic composition of the sites. Study results presented demonstrate the patterns of seasonal distributions of both individuals and species, and the pattern of species emergence throughout the year for each of four years at two of the sites. Based on the similarities in the patterns between and within sites and years, a protocol for conducting further moth surveys is also proposed. Appendices include tables showing vegetation species composition at the study sites and graphs showing numbers of individual moths and species observed in research traps.