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Insect diversity over 36 years at a protected Sierra Nevada (California) site: towards an evaluation of the insect apocalypse hypothesis
Author(s) -
Rosenheim Jay A.,
Ward Philip S.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ecological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.865
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1365-2311
pISSN - 0307-6946
DOI - 10.1111/een.12888
Subject(s) - species richness , diversity (politics) , insect , taxon , biodiversity , biology , ecology , abundance (ecology) , sociology , anthropology
Recent authors have suggested that declines of insect abundance or diversity, documented first for particular insect taxa of high interest (e.g., butterflies, bees), may apply to insect diversity more generally. This has led to an urgent call for analysis of additional longitudinal datasets to examine trends in general insect diversity. Here we present a dataset gathered from 1982 to 2018 by advanced undergraduate students and graduate students enrolled in a taxonomy course that involved collecting as many insect families as possible over a 5‐week period at a high‐elevation protected forested site in the Sierra Nevada, California, USA. The data do not support any consistent gain or loss of family‐level richness between 1982 and 2018 (no linear trend); a non‐linear model suggested a possible small decrease in family‐level richness collected between 1986 and 1990, followed by a gradual increase from 1990 to 2018. Neither weather variables nor collector experience or skill appeared to explain among‐year variation in collected insect diversity. We urge caution in attempting to draw conclusions from single‐site, longitudinal datasets like this one; a definitive answer to the hypothesis of a broad, global decline of insect diversity will require the joint analysis of many datasets like the one we share here.

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