| Literature DB >> 30271908 |
Brian V Brown1, Art Borkent2, Peter H Adler3, Dalton de Souza Amorim4, Kevin Barber5, Daniel Bickel6, Stephanie Boucher7, Scott E Brooks8, John Burger9, Zelia L Burington10, Renato S Capellari11, Daniel N R Costa12, Jeffrey M Cumming8, Greg Curler13, Carl W Dick14,15, John H Epler16, Eric Fisher17, Stephen D Gaimari18, Jon Gelhaus19, David A Grimaldi20, John Hash21, Martin Hauser18, Heikki Hippa22, Sergio Ibáñez-Bernal23, Mathias Jaschhof24, Elena P Kameneva25, Peter H Kerr18, Valery Korneyev25, Cheslavo A Korytkowski26, Giar-Ann Kung27, Gunnar Mikalsen Kvifte28, Owen Lonsdale29, Stephen A Marshall30, Wayne Mathis31, Verner Michelsen32, Stefan Naglis33, Allen L Norrbom34, Steven Paiero30, Thomas Pape32, Alessandre Pereira-Colavite35, Marc Pollet36,37,38, Sabrina Rochefort7, Alessandra Rung18, Justin B Runyon39, Jade Savage40, Vera C Silva41, Bradley J Sinclair42, Jeffrey H Skevington8, John O Stireman Iii10, John Swann43, F Christian Thompson31, Pekka Vilkamaa44, Terry Wheeler7, Terry Whitworth45, Maria Wong27, D Monty Wood8, Norman Woodley46, Tiffany Yau30, Thomas J Zavortink47, Manuel A Zumbado48.
Abstract
Estimations of tropical insect diversity generally suffer from lack of known groups or faunas against which extrapolations can be made, and have seriously underestimated the diversity of some taxa. Here we report the intensive inventory of a four-hectare tropical cloud forest in Costa Rica for one year, which yielded 4332 species of Diptera, providing the first verifiable basis for diversity of a major group of insects at a single site in the tropics. In total 73 families were present, all of which were studied to the species level, providing potentially complete coverage of all families of the order likely to be present at the site. Even so, extrapolations based on our data indicate that with further sampling, the actual total for the site could be closer to 8000 species. Efforts to completely sample a site, although resource-intensive and time-consuming, are needed to better ground estimations of world biodiversity based on limited sampling.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30271908 PMCID: PMC6123690 DOI: 10.1038/s42003-018-0022-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Commun Biol ISSN: 2399-3642
Number of species from fifteen most species-rich Diptera families at Zurquí (from the current study)
| Family | Number of species |
|---|---|
| Cecidomyiidae | 800 |
| Phoridae | 404 |
| Tachinidae | 286 |
| Mycetophilidae | 268 |
| Tipulidae | 225 |
| Drosophilidae | 219 |
| Sciaridae | 204 |
| Ceratopogonidae | 200 |
| Dolichopodidae | 178 |
| Psychodidae | 171 |
| Chironomidae | 138 |
| Muscidae | 120 |
| Agromyzidae | 117 |
| Lauxaniidae | 116 |
| Syrphidae | 93 |
Fifteen most species-rich Diptera families
| Family | Number of described species |
|---|---|
| Tipulidae s.l. | 15,457 |
| Tachinidae | 8500 |
| Asilidae | 7479 |
| Dolichopodidae | 7236 |
| Chironomidae | 7054 |
| Ceratopogonidae | 6267 |
| Cecidomyiidae | 6203 |
| Syrphidae | 6016 |
| Muscidae | 5210 |
| Bombyliidae | 4946 |
| Tephritidae | 4911 |
| Tabanidae | 4406 |
| Drosophilidae | 4315 |
| Mycetophilidae | 4164 |
| Phoridae | 4105 |
Numbers are on a worldwide basis[48], with updated Cecidomyiidae[49], Ceratopogonidae[50], Drosophilidae[51], Tephritidae (compiled by A.L. Norrbom), Tachinidae[52], and Tipulidae[53]
Fig. 1Tanglegram comparison of species richness rankings of top 15 families of Zurquí, Great Britain, and the world. Horizontal lines represent equal ranking; lines sloped downward from Zurquí toward either side join families under-represented relative to Zurquí fauna; lines sloped upwards from Zurquí on either side join families under-represented at Zurquí relative to other faunas
Fig. 2Species accumulation curves for fully extracted and identified families. Estimators from EstimateS:[45] S(est) Expected number of species in t pooled samples, given the reference sample(s); ICE Incidence-based Coverage Estimator; ACE Abundance-based Coverage Estimator. a Malaise trap 1, b Malaise trap 2
Results of species accumulation analysis of 49 fully-extracted families of Diptera
| Malaise trap #1 | Increase factor | Malaise trap #2 | Increase factor | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of specimens | 4752 | — | 291 | — |
| Observed number of species | 590 | — | 116 | — |
| ACE | 1067 | 1.8 | 257 | 2.2 |
| ICE | 1095 | 1.9 | 297 | 2.6 |
| Chao 1 | 1068 | 1.8 | 252 | 2.2 |
| Chao 2 | 1054 | 1.8 | 273 | 2.4 |
| Mean value | 1071 | 1.8 | 270 | 2.3 |
See Supplementary Data 2 for list
Increase factor=number of species estimated divided by the observed number of species
Estimators from EstimateS:[45] S(est) Expected number of species in t pooled samples, given the reference sample(s), ICE Incidence-based Coverage Estimator, ACE Abundance-based Coverage Estimator
Fig. 3Rarefaction of species accumulation curves for Malaise traps 1 and 2