Trends and indicators for quantifying moth abundance and occupancy in Scotland

Moths form an important part of Scotland’s biodiversity and an up-to-date assessment of their status is needed given their value as a diverse and species-rich taxon, with various ecosystem roles, and the known decline of moths within Britain. We use long-term citizen-science data to produce species-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of insect conservation 2019-04, Vol.23 (2), p.369-380
Hauptverfasser: Dennis, E. B., Brereton, T. M., Morgan, B. J. T., Fox, R., Shortall, C. R., Prescott, T., Foster, S.
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container_end_page 380
container_issue 2
container_start_page 369
container_title Journal of insect conservation
container_volume 23
creator Dennis, E. B.
Brereton, T. M.
Morgan, B. J. T.
Fox, R.
Shortall, C. R.
Prescott, T.
Foster, S.
description Moths form an important part of Scotland’s biodiversity and an up-to-date assessment of their status is needed given their value as a diverse and species-rich taxon, with various ecosystem roles, and the known decline of moths within Britain. We use long-term citizen-science data to produce species-level trends and multi-species indicators for moths in Scotland, to assess population (abundance) and distribution (occupancy) changes. Abundance trends for moths in Scotland are produced using Rothamsted Insect Survey count data, and, for the first time, occupancy models are used to estimate occupancy trends for moths in Scotland, using opportunistic records from the National Moth Recording Scheme. Species-level trends are combined to produce abundance and occupancy indicators. The associated uncertainty is estimated using a parametric bootstrap approach, and comparisons are made with alternative published approaches. Overall moth abundance (based on 176 species) in Scotland decreased by 20% for 1975–2014 and by 46% for 1990–2014. The occupancy indicator (based on 230 species) showed a 16% increase for 1990–2014. Alternative methods produced similar indicators and conclusions, suggesting robustness of the results, although rare species may be under-represented in our analyses. Species abundance and occupancy trends were not clearly correlated; in particular species with negative population trends showed varied occupancy responses. Further research into the drivers of moth population changes is required, but increasing occupancy is likely to be driven by a warming summer climate facilitating range expansion, whereas population declines may be driven by reductions in habitat quality, changes in land management practices and warmer, wetter winters.
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subjects Abundance
Animal Ecology
Biodiversity
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Butterflies & moths
Conservation Biology/Ecology
Entomology
Environmental quality
Indicators
Insects
Land management
Life Sciences
Occupancy
Original Paper
Population
Population changes
Population decline
Range extension
Rare species
Recording
Trends
title Trends and indicators for quantifying moth abundance and occupancy in Scotland
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