Publication | Closed Access
The Magnitude of Local Host Specif icity for Phytophagous Insects and its Implications for Estimates of Global Species Richness
58
Citations
25
References
2000
Year
BiologyEffective SpecializationBiodiversityTerrestrial ArthropodEngineeringPlant-insect InteractionNatural SciencesInsect ConservationEntomologyEvolutionary BiologyPest ManagementForest EntomologyGlobal Species RichnessPlant SpeciesHost SpecificityPhytophagous Insects
Abstract: Estimates of the global number of arthropod species range from 2 million to more than 30 million species. One of the most critical assumptions affecting the higher of these estimates is the assumed magnitude of host specificity of phytophagous insects, which varies considerably. Difficulties in estimating this value are caused by both lack of satisfactory data sets and lack of methods for its objective calculation. We provide a new method for predicting host specificity for phytophagous insects at a local scale based on the concept of effective specialization. When the insect‐plant host associations of a restricted number of plant species are known, we can predict the magnitude of host specificity when more plant species are included. Based on 2561 host observations of 697 beetle species on 50 plant species in the canopies of a tropical dry forest in Panama, we predict that host specificity for adult phytophagous beetles in this forest range from 7% to 10%. These values suggest that the higher estimates of global species richness are not tenable.
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