Stojkovic, Milica

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  • Stojkovic, Milica (2)
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Author's Bibliography

New data on the distribution and ecology of the mayfly larvae (Insecta: Ephemeroptera) of Serbia (central part of the Balkan Peninsula)

Petrovic, Ana; Milosevic, Djuradj; Paunović, Momir; Simic, Snezana; Đorđević, Nevena; Stojkovic, Milica; Simic, Vladica

(2015)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Petrovic, Ana
AU  - Milosevic, Djuradj
AU  - Paunović, Momir
AU  - Simic, Snezana
AU  - Đorđević, Nevena
AU  - Stojkovic, Milica
AU  - Simic, Vladica
PY  - 2015
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2078
AB  - This work is a contribution to the knowledge of the Ephemeroptera
   (Insecta) fauna of the central Balkan Peninsula. A total of 85 mayfly
   species (31 genera and 12 families) were reported. The largest number of
   mayfly species was recorded within the Juzna and Zapadna Morava river
   basins, while the lowest taxa richness was observed within the Sava
   basin. The highest diversity was observed in hilly mountainous regions
   due to the general environmental requirements of the majority of mayfly
   taxa, as well as the distribution of anthropogenic stress. Lowland areas
   have been more exposed to different stress factors that could reduce
   mayfly taxa richness in comparison to the hilly mountainous region
   located south of the Danube and Sava rivers. Compared with species
   richness in neighbouring countries, the expected mayfly diversity for
   Serbia is certainly higher; it has been estimated that over 100 taxa
   should occur in different types of aquatic ecosystems.
T2  - Turkish Journal of Zoology
T1  - New data on the distribution and ecology of the mayfly larvae (Insecta:
 Ephemeroptera) of Serbia (central part of the Balkan Peninsula)
IS  - 2
VL  - 39
DO  - 10.3906/zoo-1304-2
SP  - 195
EP  - 209
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Petrovic, Ana and Milosevic, Djuradj and Paunović, Momir and Simic, Snezana and Đorđević, Nevena and Stojkovic, Milica and Simic, Vladica",
year = "2015",
abstract = "This work is a contribution to the knowledge of the Ephemeroptera
   (Insecta) fauna of the central Balkan Peninsula. A total of 85 mayfly
   species (31 genera and 12 families) were reported. The largest number of
   mayfly species was recorded within the Juzna and Zapadna Morava river
   basins, while the lowest taxa richness was observed within the Sava
   basin. The highest diversity was observed in hilly mountainous regions
   due to the general environmental requirements of the majority of mayfly
   taxa, as well as the distribution of anthropogenic stress. Lowland areas
   have been more exposed to different stress factors that could reduce
   mayfly taxa richness in comparison to the hilly mountainous region
   located south of the Danube and Sava rivers. Compared with species
   richness in neighbouring countries, the expected mayfly diversity for
   Serbia is certainly higher; it has been estimated that over 100 taxa
   should occur in different types of aquatic ecosystems.",
journal = "Turkish Journal of Zoology",
title = "New data on the distribution and ecology of the mayfly larvae (Insecta:
 Ephemeroptera) of Serbia (central part of the Balkan Peninsula)",
number = "2",
volume = "39",
doi = "10.3906/zoo-1304-2",
pages = "195-209"
}
Petrovic, A., Milosevic, D., Paunović, M., Simic, S., Đorđević, N., Stojkovic, M.,& Simic, V.. (2015). New data on the distribution and ecology of the mayfly larvae (Insecta:
 Ephemeroptera) of Serbia (central part of the Balkan Peninsula). in Turkish Journal of Zoology, 39(2), 195-209.
https://doi.org/10.3906/zoo-1304-2
Petrovic A, Milosevic D, Paunović M, Simic S, Đorđević N, Stojkovic M, Simic V. New data on the distribution and ecology of the mayfly larvae (Insecta:
 Ephemeroptera) of Serbia (central part of the Balkan Peninsula). in Turkish Journal of Zoology. 2015;39(2):195-209.
doi:10.3906/zoo-1304-2 .
Petrovic, Ana, Milosevic, Djuradj, Paunović, Momir, Simic, Snezana, Đorđević, Nevena, Stojkovic, Milica, Simic, Vladica, "New data on the distribution and ecology of the mayfly larvae (Insecta:
 Ephemeroptera) of Serbia (central part of the Balkan Peninsula)" in Turkish Journal of Zoology, 39, no. 2 (2015):195-209,
https://doi.org/10.3906/zoo-1304-2 . .
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Different aggregation approaches in the chironomid community and the threshold of acceptable information loss

Milosevic, Djuradj; Stojkovic, Milica; Cerba, Dubravka; Petrovic, Ana; Paunović, Momir; Simic, Vladica

(2014)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Milosevic, Djuradj
AU  - Stojkovic, Milica
AU  - Cerba, Dubravka
AU  - Petrovic, Ana
AU  - Paunović, Momir
AU  - Simic, Vladica
PY  - 2014
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2231
AB  - Due to the problem of identification, Chironomidae larvae, although very
   abundant, are often avoided or not properly used in bioassessment
   programs. The aim of this work was to test how different aggregation
   processes-taxonomic resolution and the random aggregation approach (best
   practicable aggregation of species-BestAgg) affect the analysis of
   chironomid communities regarding any information loss. The
   self-organizing map method, together with classification strength
   analysis and Spearman's rank correlation, revealed that the genus-level
   and BestAgg-abundance matrix most accurately approximated the
   species-level community pattern. The subfamily-level dataset was
   ineffective at presenting the chironomid community structure, with a
   substantially lower concordance with the species-level dataset. The
   biologic environmental gradients analyses presented the same set of
   important environmental variables for the species-level, genus-level,
   and BestAgg-abundance matrix. The indicator values analysis showed that
   indicator genera provide information very close to that gained from
   species indicators. According to our results, the numeric relationship
   between species and higher taxa influences taxonomic scaling, limiting
   Chironomidae family aggregation, with acceptable information loss only
   up to genus level. In addition, the BestAgg approach, with the maximum
   level of aggregation, properly assesses the community structure and
   consequently describes environmental conditions.
T2  - Hydrobiologia
T1  - Different aggregation approaches in the chironomid community and the
 threshold of acceptable information loss
IS  - 1
VL  - 727
DO  - 10.1007/s10750-013-1781-5
SP  - 35
EP  - 50
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Milosevic, Djuradj and Stojkovic, Milica and Cerba, Dubravka and Petrovic, Ana and Paunović, Momir and Simic, Vladica",
year = "2014",
abstract = "Due to the problem of identification, Chironomidae larvae, although very
   abundant, are often avoided or not properly used in bioassessment
   programs. The aim of this work was to test how different aggregation
   processes-taxonomic resolution and the random aggregation approach (best
   practicable aggregation of species-BestAgg) affect the analysis of
   chironomid communities regarding any information loss. The
   self-organizing map method, together with classification strength
   analysis and Spearman's rank correlation, revealed that the genus-level
   and BestAgg-abundance matrix most accurately approximated the
   species-level community pattern. The subfamily-level dataset was
   ineffective at presenting the chironomid community structure, with a
   substantially lower concordance with the species-level dataset. The
   biologic environmental gradients analyses presented the same set of
   important environmental variables for the species-level, genus-level,
   and BestAgg-abundance matrix. The indicator values analysis showed that
   indicator genera provide information very close to that gained from
   species indicators. According to our results, the numeric relationship
   between species and higher taxa influences taxonomic scaling, limiting
   Chironomidae family aggregation, with acceptable information loss only
   up to genus level. In addition, the BestAgg approach, with the maximum
   level of aggregation, properly assesses the community structure and
   consequently describes environmental conditions.",
journal = "Hydrobiologia",
title = "Different aggregation approaches in the chironomid community and the
 threshold of acceptable information loss",
number = "1",
volume = "727",
doi = "10.1007/s10750-013-1781-5",
pages = "35-50"
}
Milosevic, D., Stojkovic, M., Cerba, D., Petrovic, A., Paunović, M.,& Simic, V.. (2014). Different aggregation approaches in the chironomid community and the
 threshold of acceptable information loss. in Hydrobiologia, 727(1), 35-50.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-013-1781-5
Milosevic D, Stojkovic M, Cerba D, Petrovic A, Paunović M, Simic V. Different aggregation approaches in the chironomid community and the
 threshold of acceptable information loss. in Hydrobiologia. 2014;727(1):35-50.
doi:10.1007/s10750-013-1781-5 .
Milosevic, Djuradj, Stojkovic, Milica, Cerba, Dubravka, Petrovic, Ana, Paunović, Momir, Simic, Vladica, "Different aggregation approaches in the chironomid community and the
 threshold of acceptable information loss" in Hydrobiologia, 727, no. 1 (2014):35-50,
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-013-1781-5 . .
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