Literature DB >> 26521706

Resource specialists lead local insect community turnover associated with temperature - analysis of an 18-year full-seasonal record of moths and beetles.

Philip Francis Thomsen1, Peter Søgaard Jørgensen2, Hans Henrik Bruun2, Jan Pedersen3, Torben Riis-Nielsen4, Krzysztof Jonko5, Iwona Słowińska6, Carsten Rahbek3, Ole Karsholt7.   

Abstract

Insect responses to recent climate change are well documented, but the role of resource specialization in determining species vulnerability remains poorly understood. Uncovering local ecological effects of temperature change with high-quality, standardized data provides an important first opportunity for predictions about responses of resource specialists, and long-term time series are essential in revealing these responses. Here, we investigate temperature-related changes in local insect communities, using a sampling site with more than a quarter-million records from two decades (1992-2009) of full-season, quantitative light trapping of 1543 species of moths and beetles. We investigated annual as well as long-term changes in fauna composition, abundance and phenology in a climate-related context using species temperature affinities and local temperature data. Finally, we explored these local changes in the context of dietary specialization. Across both moths and beetles, temperature affinity of specialists increased through net gain of hot-dwelling species and net loss of cold-dwelling species. The climate-related composition of generalists remained constant over time. We observed an increase in species richness of both groups. Furthermore, we observed divergent phenological responses between cold- and hot-dwelling species, advancing and delaying their relative abundance, respectively. Phenological advances were particularly pronounced in cold-adapted specialists. Our results suggest an important role of resource specialization in explaining the compositional and phenological responses of insect communities to local temperature increases. We propose that resource specialists in particular are affected by local temperature increase, leading to the distinct temperature-mediated turnover seen for this group. We suggest that the observed increase in species number could have been facilitated by dissimilar utilization of an expanded growing season by cold- and hot-adapted species, as indicated by their oppositely directed phenological responses. An especially pronounced advancement of cold-adapted specialists suggests that such phenological advances might help minimize further temperature-induced loss of resource specialists. Although limited to a single study site, our results suggest several local changes in the insect fauna in concordance with expected change of larger-scale temperature increases.
© 2015 The Authors. Journal of Animal Ecology © 2015 British Ecological Society.

Keywords:  climate change; community temperature index; community turnover; diet specialists; ecological specialization; light trap; phenology shift

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26521706     DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.12452

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anim Ecol        ISSN: 0021-8790            Impact factor:   5.091


  8 in total

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2.  Natural history museum collection and citizen science data show advancing phenology of Danish hoverflies (Insecta: Diptera, Syrphidae) with increasing annual temperature.

Authors:  Kent Olsen; Thomas Eske Holm; Thomas Pape; Thomas J Simonsen
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-05-13       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Temperature-Driven Biodiversity Change: Disentangling Space and Time.

Authors:  Conor Waldock; Maria Dornelas; Amanda E Bates
Journal:  Bioscience       Date:  2018-09-19       Impact factor: 8.589

4.  Environmental DNA metabarcoding of wild flowers reveals diverse communities of terrestrial arthropods.

Authors:  Philip Francis Thomsen; Eva E Sigsgaard
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-02-07       Impact factor: 2.912

5.  An Automated Light Trap to Monitor Moths (Lepidoptera) Using Computer Vision-Based Tracking and Deep Learning.

Authors:  Kim Bjerge; Jakob Bonde Nielsen; Martin Videbæk Sepstrup; Flemming Helsing-Nielsen; Toke Thomas Høye
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6.  From Phenology and Habitat Preferences to Climate Change: Importance of Citizen Science in Studying Insect Ecology in the Continental Scale with American Red Flat Bark Beetle, Cucujus clavipes, as a Model Species.

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7.  Mediterranean moth diversity is sensitive to increasing temperatures and drought under climate change.

Authors:  Britta Uhl; Mirko Wölfling; Claus Bässler
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-08-25       Impact factor: 4.996

8.  BioTIME: A database of biodiversity time series for the Anthropocene.

Authors:  Maria Dornelas; Laura H Antão; Faye Moyes; Amanda E Bates; Anne E Magurran; Dušan Adam; Asem A Akhmetzhanova; Ward Appeltans; José Manuel Arcos; Haley Arnold; Narayanan Ayyappan; Gal Badihi; Andrew H Baird; Miguel Barbosa; Tiago Egydio Barreto; Claus Bässler; Alecia Bellgrove; Jonathan Belmaker; Lisandro Benedetti-Cecchi; Brian J Bett; Anne D Bjorkman; Magdalena Błażewicz; Shane A Blowes; Christopher P Bloch; Timothy C Bonebrake; Susan Boyd; Matt Bradford; Andrew J Brooks; James H Brown; Helge Bruelheide; Phaedra Budy; Fernando Carvalho; Edward Castañeda-Moya; Chaolun Allen Chen; John F Chamblee; Tory J Chase; Laura Siegwart Collier; Sharon K Collinge; Richard Condit; Elisabeth J Cooper; J Hans C Cornelissen; Unai Cotano; Shannan Kyle Crow; Gabriella Damasceno; Claire H Davies; Robert A Davis; Frank P Day; Steven Degraer; Tim S Doherty; Timothy E Dunn; Giselda Durigan; J Emmett Duffy; Dor Edelist; Graham J Edgar; Robin Elahi; Sarah C Elmendorf; Anders Enemar; S K Morgan Ernest; Rubén Escribano; Marc Estiarte; Brian S Evans; Tung-Yung Fan; Fabiano Turini Farah; Luiz Loureiro Fernandes; Fábio Z Farneda; Alessandra Fidelis; Robert Fitt; Anna Maria Fosaa; Geraldo Antonio Daher Correa Franco; Grace E Frank; William R Fraser; Hernando García; Roberto Cazzolla Gatti; Or Givan; Elizabeth Gorgone-Barbosa; William A Gould; Corinna Gries; Gary D Grossman; Julio R Gutierréz; Stephen Hale; Mark E Harmon; John Harte; Gary Haskins; Donald L Henshaw; Luise Hermanutz; Pamela Hidalgo; Pedro Higuchi; Andrew Hoey; Gert Van Hoey; Annika Hofgaard; Kristen Holeck; Robert D Hollister; Richard Holmes; Mia Hoogenboom; Chih-Hao Hsieh; Stephen P Hubbell; Falk Huettmann; Christine L Huffard; Allen H Hurlbert; Natália Macedo Ivanauskas; David Janík; Ute Jandt; Anna Jażdżewska; Tore Johannessen; Jill Johnstone; Julia Jones; Faith A M Jones; Jungwon Kang; Tasrif Kartawijaya; Erin C Keeley; Douglas A Kelt; Rebecca Kinnear; Kari Klanderud; Halvor Knutsen; Christopher C Koenig; Alessandra R Kortz; Kamil Král; Linda A Kuhnz; Chao-Yang Kuo; David J Kushner; Claire Laguionie-Marchais; Lesley T Lancaster; Cheol Min Lee; Jonathan S Lefcheck; Esther Lévesque; David Lightfoot; Francisco Lloret; John D Lloyd; Adrià López-Baucells; Maite Louzao; Joshua S Madin; Borgþór Magnússon; Shahar Malamud; Iain Matthews; Kent P McFarland; Brian McGill; Diane McKnight; William O McLarney; Jason Meador; Peter L Meserve; Daniel J Metcalfe; Christoph F J Meyer; Anders Michelsen; Nataliya Milchakova; Tom Moens; Even Moland; Jon Moore; Carolina Mathias Moreira; Jörg Müller; Grace Murphy; Isla H Myers-Smith; Randall W Myster; Andrew Naumov; Francis Neat; James A Nelson; Michael Paul Nelson; Stephen F Newton; Natalia Norden; Jeffrey C Oliver; Esben M Olsen; Vladimir G Onipchenko; Krzysztof Pabis; Robert J Pabst; Alain Paquette; Sinta Pardede; David M Paterson; Raphaël Pélissier; Josep Peñuelas; Alejandro Pérez-Matus; Oscar Pizarro; Francesco Pomati; Eric Post; Herbert H T Prins; John C Priscu; Pieter Provoost; Kathleen L Prudic; Erkki Pulliainen; B R Ramesh; Olivia Mendivil Ramos; Andrew Rassweiler; Jose Eduardo Rebelo; Daniel C Reed; Peter B Reich; Suzanne M Remillard; Anthony J Richardson; J Paul Richardson; Itai van Rijn; Ricardo Rocha; Victor H Rivera-Monroy; Christian Rixen; Kevin P Robinson; Ricardo Ribeiro Rodrigues; Denise de Cerqueira Rossa-Feres; Lars Rudstam; Henry Ruhl; Catalina S Ruz; Erica M Sampaio; Nancy Rybicki; Andrew Rypel; Sofia Sal; Beatriz Salgado; Flavio A M Santos; Ana Paula Savassi-Coutinho; Sara Scanga; Jochen Schmidt; Robert Schooley; Fakhrizal Setiawan; Kwang-Tsao Shao; Gaius R Shaver; Sally Sherman; Thomas W Sherry; Jacek Siciński; Caya Sievers; Ana Carolina da Silva; Fernando Rodrigues da Silva; Fabio L Silveira; Jasper Slingsby; Tracey Smart; Sara J Snell; Nadejda A Soudzilovskaia; Gabriel B G Souza; Flaviana Maluf Souza; Vinícius Castro Souza; Christopher D Stallings; Rowan Stanforth; Emily H Stanley; José Mauro Sterza; Maarten Stevens; Rick Stuart-Smith; Yzel Rondon Suarez; Sarah Supp; Jorge Yoshio Tamashiro; Sukmaraharja Tarigan; Gary P Thiede; Simon Thorn; Anne Tolvanen; Maria Teresa Zugliani Toniato; Ørjan Totland; Robert R Twilley; Gediminas Vaitkus; Nelson Valdivia; Martha Isabel Vallejo; Thomas J Valone; Carl Van Colen; Jan Vanaverbeke; Fabio Venturoli; Hans M Verheye; Marcelo Vianna; Rui P Vieira; Tomáš Vrška; Con Quang Vu; Lien Van Vu; Robert B Waide; Conor Waldock; Dave Watts; Sara Webb; Tomasz Wesołowski; Ethan P White; Claire E Widdicombe; Dustin Wilgers; Richard Williams; Stefan B Williams; Mark Williamson; Michael R Willig; Trevor J Willis; Sonja Wipf; Kerry D Woods; Eric J Woehler; Kyle Zawada; Michael L Zettler; Thomas Hickler
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  8 in total

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