| Literature DB >> 35338150 |
Ivan N Bolotov1,2, Mikhail Yu Gofarov3, Evgeny S Koshkin4, Vyacheslav V Gorbach5, Yury I Bakhaev6, Oleg E Berlov7, Sergey Yu Gordeev8, Yulia S Kolosova3, Alexander V Kondakov9,3, Alexey V Korshunov10, Grigory S Potapov3, Sergey Yu Sinev11, Spiridon S Sleptsov12, Vitaly M Spitsyn3, Evgeny G Strelnikov13, Andrey V Timchenko14, Risto Haverinen15, Kari Nupponen16, Hannu Saarenmaa17.
Abstract
Global environmental changes may cause dramatic insect declines but over century-long time series of certain species' records are rarely available for scientific research. The Menetries' Tiger Moth (Arctia menetriesii) appears to be the most enigmatic example among boreal insects. Although it occurs throughout the entire Eurasian taiga biome, it is so rare that less than 100 specimens were recorded since its original description in 1846. Here, we present the database, which contains nearly all available information on the species' records collected from 1840s to 2020. The data on A. menetriesii records (N = 78) through geographic regions, environments, and different timeframes are compiled and unified. The database may serve as the basis for a wide array of future research such as the distribution modeling and predictions of range shifts under climate changes. It represents a unique example of a more than century-long dataset of distributional, ecological, and phenological data designed for an exceptionally rare but widespread boreal insect, which primarily occurs in hard-to-reach, uninhabited areas of Eurasia.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35338150 PMCID: PMC8956709 DOI: 10.1038/s41597-022-01230-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 8.501
Fig. 1Localities and habitats of Arctia menetriesii. (a) Map of records listed in the database[52]. The size of circles indicates the uncertainty of the geographic co-ordinates (see Legend). The color areas represent three regions discussed in this study as follows: yellow Europe (records from Finland, Northern European Russia, and the Urals); red Siberia (records from Western and Eastern Siberia in Russia, and East Kazakhstan); and green the Far East (records from the Russian Far East and northeastern China). The map was created using ESRI ArcGIS 10 software (https://www.esri.com/arcgis); the topographic base of the map was created with Natural Earth Free Vector and Raster Map Data (https://www.naturalearthdata.com) and Global Self-consistent Hierarchical High-resolution Geography, GSHHG v. 2.3.7 (https://www.soest.hawaii.edu/wessel/gshhg). (Map: Mikhail Y. Gofarov). (b–d) Examples of habitat images linked to the database: (b) half-open bog surrounded by primeval coniferous forest, Kuhmo, Finland (Photo: Risto Haverinen); (c) primeval coniferous taiga forest in the Negusyakh River valley, Yugansky State Nature Reserve, Western Siberia, Russia (Photo: Evgeny G. Strelnikov); (d) primeval coniferous taiga forest near the Bolshoy Anay River, Baikalo-Lensky Nature Reserve, Eastern Siberia, Russia (Photo: Oleg E. Berlov).
Fig. 2Number of records and examples of specimen images of Arctia menetriesii. (a) Cumulative number of records throughout the entire species’ range over the past 120 years (1900–2020)[52]. (b-e) Examples of imago specimen images linked to the database:[52] Image AM-075_SP-01_SYS: “Songoria” [=East Kazakhstan], before 1846, holotype ♂ [coll. ZIN] (Photo: Sergey Y. Sinev) (b); Image AM-071_SP-01_ESK: the top of Arsenyeva Mt., Sikhote-Alin Mts, Far East, Russia, 20.vii.1948, ♀, Kononov & Kurentzov leg. [coll. FSCEATB FEB RAS] (Photo: Evgeny S. Koshkin) (c); Image AM-028_SP-01_OEB: Chechui River near the mouth of Rassokha River, Irkutsk Oblast, Siberia, Russia, 22.vii.1969, ♀, Pleshanov leg. [coll. of E. & O. Berlov, Irkutsk, Russia] (Photo: Oleg E. Berlov) (d); Image AM-035_SP-04_SYG: Onokhoy, Uda River valley, Republic of Buryatia, Siberia, Russia, 11.vii.2012, ♀, Gordeev leg. [coll. IGEB] (Photo: Sergey Y. Gordeev) (e).
Fig. 3Structure of the Menetries’ Tiger Moth Range and Ecology Database (1840s-2020)[52]. The field names are decoded in Online-only Table 1. The blocks containing environmental, temporal, and biological categories are green, blue, and red, respectively. The linked data (images) is highlighted by dashed orange frame. Living female moth: image AM-035_SP-01_SYG.jpeg linked to the database, Onokhoy settlement, Uda River valley, Republic of Buryatia, Russia. (Graphics: Ivan N. Bolotov; Photo: Sergey Y. Gordeev).
Description of each parameter and factor levels used in the Menetries’ Tiger Moth Range and Ecology Database (1840s-2020).
| Field name | Parameters, factors, and linked data | Data type | Data group | Brief description | Number of records, for which this parameter/factor/linked data is available |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RECOR_ID | Record ID | Text | ID | The unique ID that was assigned to each available specimen record (AM-001 – AM-078) | 78 |
| SAMPLE_DATA | Locality and sample data | Text | Primary survey data | Brief description of available label and field observation data for each specimen such as the locality, habitat, date, developmental stage, sex, condition, behavior, and name of collector(s). The current depository abbreviation, if available, is presented as well | 78 |
| REGION | Region name | Text | Environment | The records were separated into three large regions as follows: Europe (with the Urals); Siberia; and the Far East | 78 |
| COUNTRY | Country name | Text | Environment | The species records are situated in four countries: China, Finland, Kazakhstan, and Russia | 78 |
| SUBREGION | Subregion name | Text | Environment | As a subregion, we list administrative divisions of the corresponding countries such as provinces and regions | 78 |
| DEC_LAT | N (latitude) | Decimal | Environment | Latitudinal co-ordinate of the collecting locality | 76 |
| DEC_LON | E (longitude) | Decimal | Environment | Longitudinal co-ordinate of the collecting locality | 76 |
| UNCERT_COOR | Co-ordinate uncertainty (m) | Integer | Environment | It ranges from 10 to 200,000 m | 76 |
| ALTITUDE | Altitude (m) | Integer | Environment | Altitude of the sampling locality. It was estimated based on the co-ordinates with lower uncertainty (≤10,000 m) only | 72 |
| HABITAT | Habitat | Text | Environment | Five factor levels were applied as follows: mountain forest; alpine meadows and tundra; plain forest; riparian forest; and town | 71 |
| WATERBODY | Presence of waterbody at the collection site | Text | Environment | Three factor levels were used as follows: absent; lake shore; and river (=stream) valley | 70 |
| BAI_DIV | Bailey’s Ecoregion Division | Text | Environment | Abbreviation of the corresponding division, which was estimated based on the co-ordinates. The abbreviations of divisions are given in the Methods section | 76 |
| BAI_PRO | Bailey’s Ecoregion Province | Integer | Environment | Numerical code of the corresponding province, which was estimated based on the co-ordinates. The codes of provinces are given in the Methods section | 76 |
| G200_BIOME | The Global 200 Biome | Text | Environment | Name of the corresponding WWF’s Global 200 biome, which was estimated based on the co-ordinates | 76 |
| G200_ECORE | The Global 200 Ecoregion | Text | Environment | Name of the corresponding WWF’s Global 200 ecoregion, which was estimated based on the co-ordinates | 76 |
| DAY | Day | Integer | Timeframe | Day, on which the specimen was collected | 61 |
| TEN_DAY | Ten-day period | Integer | Timeframe | Ten-day period, on which the specimen was collected | 64 |
| MONTH | Month | Text | Timeframe | Month, in which the specimen was collected | 67 |
| YEAR | Year | Integer | Timeframe | Year, in which the specimen was collected (three specimens were listed with uncertain year as follows: 1840s; before 1926; and before 1982) | 74 |
| EVE_ODD | Even or odd year | Text | Timeframe | Two factor levels were used as follows: even vs odd | 71 |
| STAGE | Stage | Text | Biology | Two factor levels were used as follows: larva vs adult (imago) | 78 |
| SEX | Sex | Text | Biology | Two factor levels were used as follows: male vs female (for imaginal samples only) | 58 |
| CONDITION | Condition | Text | Biology | Two factor levels were used as follows: living vs dead | 75 |
| HAB_IM_ID | Habitat image ID | Text | Linked data (image) | The unique file ID corresponding to available images of a given habitat. This file ID was created using the record ID + HB (habitat) + number of image + name of photographer [abbreviation] + file format, for example: AM-035_HB-01_SYG.jpeg. The number of available image files is given in square brackets | 10 |
| SPE_IM_ID | Specimen image ID | Text | Linked data (image) | The unique file ID corresponding to available images of a given specimen. This file ID was created using the record ID + SP [specimen] + number of image + name of photographer [abbreviation] + file format, for example: AM-035_SP-01_SYG.jpeg. The number of available image files is given in square brackets | 29 |
| REFS | References | Text | Sources of information | Citation of information sources for each record as follows: Author(s) (Year) | 78 |
| FULL_REFS | Full references | Text | Sources of information | Full reference(s) to each record. The complete list of references is also deposited with the database as a supplementary PDF file. | 78 |
Fig. 43D contour plots of the number of collected individuals of Arctia menetriesii against geographic variables (altitude and geographic co-ordinates) of the localities based on the Menetries’ Tiger Moth Range and Ecology Database (1840s-2020):[52] (a) number of collected individuals vs latitude and altitude; and (b) number of collected individuals vs longitude and altitude. The white circles indicate the species’ localities. The color areas and corresponding legend show the spline interpolation of the number of collected individuals per locality. In particular, the yellow to green areas indicate the lack of records, the orange to red areas indicate the prevalence of singleton records, and the darker red areas indicate the possibility to find more than one specimen per locality under these conditions. The white dashed line separates approximate areas corresponding to Europe and Asia. The 3D plots were created using v. Statistica 13.3 (StatSoft®, TIBCO Software Inc., CA, USA).
Fig. 6Scatterplot showing number of collected individuals of Arctia menetriesii plotted against altitude of the collecting locality and categorized by habitat type and the presence of waterbody at the locality. The scatterplot was created using Statistica v. 13.3 (StatSoft®, TIBCO Software Inc., CA, USA) based on the Menetries’ Tiger Moth Range and Ecology Database (1840s-2020)[52].
Fig. 5Scatterplot showing number of collected individuals of Arctia menetriesii plotted against altitude of the collecting locality and categorized by habitat type and region. The scatterplot was created using v. Statistica 13.3 (StatSoft®, TIBCO Software Inc., CA, USA) based on the Menetries’ Tiger Moth Range and Ecology Database (1840s-2020)[52].
| Measurement(s) | specimen record • biological parameters of specimen • environmental characteristics • sampling date • habitat image • specimen image |
| Technology Type(s) | digital curation |
| Factor Type(s) | year • month • ten-day period • day • geographic location • altitude • habitat • landscape type • presence of waterbody • ecoregion • developmental stage • sex • individual condition |
| Sample Characteristic - Organism | Menetries’ Tiger Moth |
| Sample Characteristic - Environment | taiga biome • high-altitude environment |
| Sample Characteristic - Location | Northern Eurasia |