Three decades of declines restructure butterfly communities in the Midwestern United States
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Leuenberger, Wendy; Doser, Jeffrey W.; Belitz, Michael W.; Ries, Leslie; Haddad, Nick M.; Thogmartin, Wayne E.; Zipkin, Elise F.
署名单位:
Michigan State University; Michigan State University; North Carolina State University; Georgetown University; Michigan State University; United States Department of the Interior; United States Geological Survey
刊物名称:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN/ISSBN:
0027-9398
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2501340122
发表日期:
2025-08-19
关键词:
land-use
climate
abundance
HISTORY
TRANSFORMATION
diversity
increases
reveals
scale
摘要:
Insects are declining worldwide. These declines have been documented across taxonomic groups and are worrisome given ecosystem services provided by insects. Long-term data have illuminated butterfly declines across geographic regions. However, critical questions remain on how butterfly declines are distributed across species and functional groups, limiting effective conservation. Here, we show unprecedented changes in butterfly biodiversity resulting from 32 y of species levels declines throughout the Midwestern United States. No species increased over the three-decade study period and abundance declined across every functional group (e.g., rare, common, migratory, resident; annual mean trend: -0.9 to-2.3% per year). Species richness declined across all but one functional group, with concomitant increases in evenness (e.g., abundance among species) in several groups resulting from steeper losses in abundance for common species (abundance: -1.9% per year; richness: -0.04% per year) as compared to rare species (abundance: -0.9% per year; richness: -1.33% per year). Our results paint a bleaker picture than other butterfly studies likely due to our long time series of data and ability to include rare species. Such widespread declines undoubtedly affect other trophic levels and ecosystem services. Focusing risk assessments and management interventions only on rare species is likely to be insufficient given broad declines across species, which have fundamentally restructured butterfly communities in the region. As such, conservation efforts should shift focus to species assemblages and entire communities when possible.
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