Publications by authors named "Unal Zeybekoglu"

Article Synopsis
  • - This study investigates how different tissue types (chicken heart, bovine minced meat, bovine tongue) and temperatures (15, 20, 25, 30, 32°C) impact the development of the flesh fly, Sarcophaga crassipalpis, which is used in forensic science to estimate the time of death.
  • - Findings indicate that temperature significantly affects the duration of larval and pupal stages, with an increase in temperature generally leading to faster development, although not at the highest temperature (32°C).
  • - Larval survival is notably lowest at 32°C across all tissue types, and all pupae reared in bovine minced meat failed to reach adulthood at this temperature, emphasizing
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This study investigates the impacts of three different heavy metals at different concentrations on some life-history traits of Lucilia sericata (Meigen 1826) (Diptera: Calliphoridae). First-instar larvae of L. sericata were reared on a diet containing four concentrations (0.

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Tshurtshurnella sinopei sp. nov. is described after the specimens collected in Sinop, Western Black Sea Region of Turkey, in August 2017.

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Succession in local dung beetle assemblages influences their delivery of ecological functions in natural and modified environments globally. Short-term changes in dung beetle (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) species richness, abundance, and biomass were investigated in standardized dung pads in northern, coastal Turkey. For mean tunneling guild abundance, dung deposition time, dung exposure period, and their interaction were significant, and for mean dung dwelling guild abundance, dung exposure period was significant, as was the interaction with dung deposition time, which collectively evidenced temporal resource partitioning, based principally on differences in diel activity.

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Guilds of dung dwelling and tunneling dung beetles coexist in local assemblages in warm temperate regions, despite the tendency of dwellers to be inferior competitors. A field experiment on the Black Sea coast of Turkey examined the role of temporal resource partitioning in their coexistence. Standardized dung pads deposited at 4 h intervals through a 24 h period in summer were collected 12, 24, or 48 h later.

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Acoustic and morphological characters are very important to distinguish species of Cicadidae. In this study, the morphological and acoustic characters of Cicadatra platyptera Fieber, 1876 (Hemiptera, Cicadidae) collected from Turkey were analysed. The external morphological structures of two species were drawn and photographs of some specimens were taken.

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