Litcius/Paper detail

Climate drivers of adult insect activity are conditioned by life history traits

Michael W. Belitz, Vijay Barve, Joshua R. Doby, Maggie M. Hantak, Elise A. Larsen, Daijiang Li, Jessica A. Oswald, Neeka Sewnath, Mitchell J Walters, Narayani Barve, Kamala Earl, Nicholas Gardner, Robert Guralnick, Brian J. Stucky

2021Ecology Letters28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Insect phenological lability is key for determining which species will adapt under environmental change. However, little is known about when adult insect activity terminates and overall activity duration. We used community-science and museum specimen data to investigate the effects of climate and urbanisation on timing of adult insect activity for 101 species varying in life history traits. We found detritivores and species with aquatic larval stages extend activity periods most rapidly in response to increasing regional temperature. Conversely, species with subterranean larval stages have relatively constant durations regardless of regional temperature. Species extended their period of adult activity similarly in warmer conditions regardless of voltinism classification. Longer adult durations may represent a general response to warming, but voltinism data in subtropical environments are likely underreported. This effort provides a framework to address the drivers of adult insect phenology at continental scales and a basis for predicting species response to environmental change.

Topics & Concepts

VoltinismEcologyPhenologyBiologySubtropicsClimate changeInsectAquatic insectLarvaLife history theoryBiodiversityLife historySpecies Distribution and Climate ChangePlant and animal studiesAnimal and Plant Science Education
Climate drivers of adult insect activity are conditioned by life history traits | Litcius