Biodiversity assessment of freshwater shrimps and crabs in Nee Soon swamp area, Singapore.

The Nee Soon Swamp Forest is one of the most important and the last vestige of swamp forests in Singapore. To date, most studies have placed its emphasis on taxonomic studies without any detailed recordings of the distribution and population characteristics of freshwater shrimps and crabs in the Nee...

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Main Author: Sun, Samantha Wenyu.
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2011
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/44353
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-443532023-02-28T17:59:51Z Biodiversity assessment of freshwater shrimps and crabs in Nee Soon swamp area, Singapore. Sun, Samantha Wenyu. School of Biological Sciences National Biodiversity Centre, National Parks Board Cai Yixiong DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences::Ecology The Nee Soon Swamp Forest is one of the most important and the last vestige of swamp forests in Singapore. To date, most studies have placed its emphasis on taxonomic studies without any detailed recordings of the distribution and population characteristics of freshwater shrimps and crabs in the Nee Soon Swamp area. As such, with the two methods, hand sampling and the trap sampling, complementing each other, the first set of baseline data of freshwater decapods residing in the Nee Soon freshwater swamp was obtained. After conducting four months of survey, the Shannon-Weiner index had show that the middle reach of the Nee Soon freshwater swamp showed greater species diversity in general. Numerical dominance was observed in the population densities of both M.malayanum (1 - 32.5 individuals per site) and C.malayensis (9.25 - 29.75 individuals per site). In contrast, M.sundaicum and M.platycheles were found in much lower numbers, with mean abundance at all sites ranging from1.13-2.13 and 0.88-1.75 individual per site respectively by hand sampling. Trap sampling on the other hand yielded different results, with Mainpond2 having the highest mean abundance of M.sundaicum (13.25±6.48 individuals per site) and M.platycheles having highest abundance in Midpoint2 (13.25±11.18 individuals per site). New findings were observed at USR1 where M.nipponense and P.amnicus were observed to reside at the edge of Nee Soon freshwater swamp for the first time. Significant results were also recorded for the endemic species P.reticulata, with Midpoint 1 bearing the highest population density of 7 ± 3.8 crabs per site, and mean carapace length of 4.213 ± 0.27 cm. Results obtained are to facilitate future conservation efforts in this area. The future of conservation management proves to be a promising one. Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences 2011-06-01T03:09:35Z 2011-06-01T03:09:35Z 2011 2011 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/44353 en Nanyang Technological University 62 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences::Ecology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences::Ecology
Sun, Samantha Wenyu.
Biodiversity assessment of freshwater shrimps and crabs in Nee Soon swamp area, Singapore.
description The Nee Soon Swamp Forest is one of the most important and the last vestige of swamp forests in Singapore. To date, most studies have placed its emphasis on taxonomic studies without any detailed recordings of the distribution and population characteristics of freshwater shrimps and crabs in the Nee Soon Swamp area. As such, with the two methods, hand sampling and the trap sampling, complementing each other, the first set of baseline data of freshwater decapods residing in the Nee Soon freshwater swamp was obtained. After conducting four months of survey, the Shannon-Weiner index had show that the middle reach of the Nee Soon freshwater swamp showed greater species diversity in general. Numerical dominance was observed in the population densities of both M.malayanum (1 - 32.5 individuals per site) and C.malayensis (9.25 - 29.75 individuals per site). In contrast, M.sundaicum and M.platycheles were found in much lower numbers, with mean abundance at all sites ranging from1.13-2.13 and 0.88-1.75 individual per site respectively by hand sampling. Trap sampling on the other hand yielded different results, with Mainpond2 having the highest mean abundance of M.sundaicum (13.25±6.48 individuals per site) and M.platycheles having highest abundance in Midpoint2 (13.25±11.18 individuals per site). New findings were observed at USR1 where M.nipponense and P.amnicus were observed to reside at the edge of Nee Soon freshwater swamp for the first time. Significant results were also recorded for the endemic species P.reticulata, with Midpoint 1 bearing the highest population density of 7 ± 3.8 crabs per site, and mean carapace length of 4.213 ± 0.27 cm. Results obtained are to facilitate future conservation efforts in this area. The future of conservation management proves to be a promising one.
author2 School of Biological Sciences
author_facet School of Biological Sciences
Sun, Samantha Wenyu.
format Final Year Project
author Sun, Samantha Wenyu.
author_sort Sun, Samantha Wenyu.
title Biodiversity assessment of freshwater shrimps and crabs in Nee Soon swamp area, Singapore.
title_short Biodiversity assessment of freshwater shrimps and crabs in Nee Soon swamp area, Singapore.
title_full Biodiversity assessment of freshwater shrimps and crabs in Nee Soon swamp area, Singapore.
title_fullStr Biodiversity assessment of freshwater shrimps and crabs in Nee Soon swamp area, Singapore.
title_full_unstemmed Biodiversity assessment of freshwater shrimps and crabs in Nee Soon swamp area, Singapore.
title_sort biodiversity assessment of freshwater shrimps and crabs in nee soon swamp area, singapore.
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/44353
_version_ 1759856334337998848