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The Distribution of Insects along Elevational Gradients

317

Citations

31

References

1990

Year

TLDR

The distribution of insects along elevational gradients is controversial. Long‑term studies reveal that insect species richness peaks at lower elevations, with latitude, disturbance, and sampling regime shaping the pattern, indicating that mid‑elevation peaks are often artifacts of short‑term sampling.

Abstract

The distribution of insects along elevational gradients is controversial. Recent longterm sampling studies have concluded that mid-elevational peaks in species richness identified previously may have come from the short-term sampling regimes employed, and from disturbance at lower elevations. Long-term sampling seems likely to reveal peaks at lower elevations. Analysis of 20 studies taken from the literature add the possibility that the latitude at which a study is undertaken influences the elevation of peak species richness. A study of 12 open sites in the southeastern U.S., ranging in elevation from 100 m to 1700 m, reveals that both principal reasons advanced previously for mid-elevational peaks may be valid, if short-term sampling is employed. Taken together, all of the evidence indicates that a complex interplay of local ecological interactions, latitude, disturbance, and sampling regime determines the elevation of maximum insect species richness. The temporal and spatial scale employed strongly influences the evaluation of this ecological pattern.

References

YearCitations

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