Litcius/Paper detail

Tropical beetles more sensitive to impacts are less likely to be known to science

Michael J. W. Boyle, Adam Sharp, Maxwell V Barclay, Arthur Y. C. Chung, Robert M. Ewers, Guillaume de Rougemont, Timothy C. Bonebrake, R. L. Kitching, Nigel E. Stork, Louise A. Ashton

2024Current Biology16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

. Insect biodiversity predictions are based mostly on well-studied taxa and extrapolated to other groups, but no one knows whether resilience to environmental change varies between undescribed and described species. Here, we collected staphylinid beetles from unlogged and logged tropical forests in Borneo and investigated their responses to environmental change. Out of 252 morphospecies collected, 76% were undescribed. Undescribed species showed higher community turnover, reduced abundance and decreased probability of occurrence in logged forests. Thus the unknown components of tropical insect biodiversity are likely more impacted by human-induced environmental change. If these patterns are widespread, how accurate will assessments of insect declines in the tropics be?

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAgroforestryEcologyInsect and Arachnid Ecology and BehaviorForest Insect Ecology and ManagementSpecies Distribution and Climate Change