Rapid declines of common, widespread British moths provide evidence of an insect biodiversity crisis

Conrad, Kelvin, Warren, M. S., Fox, R., Parsons, M. S. and Woiwod, Ian (2006) Rapid declines of common, widespread British moths provide evidence of an insect biodiversity crisis. Biological Conservation, 132. pp. 279-291. 10.1016/j.biocon.2006.04.020
Copy

A fundamental problem in estimating biodiversity loss is that very little quantitative data are available for insects, which comprise more than two-thirds of terrestrial species. We present national population trends for a species-rich and ecologically diverse insect group: widespread and common macro-moths in Britain. Two-thirds of the 337 species studied have declined over the 35 yr study and 21% (71) of the species declined >30% 10 yr−1. If IUCN (World Conservation Union) criteria are applied at the national scale, these 71 species would be regarded as threatened. The declines are at least as great as those recently reported for British butterflies and exceed those of British birds and vascular plants. These results have important and worrying implications for species such as insectivorous birds and bats, and suggests as-yet undetected declines may be widespread among temperate-zone insects. 

mail Request Copy

picture_as_pdf
1-s2.0-S0006320706001777-main.pdf
subject
Published Version
lock
Restricted to Repository staff only
Creative Commons Attribution
Available under Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

Request Copy

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core OpenURL ContextObject RIOXX2 XML OpenURL ContextObject in Span Data Cite XML OPENAIRE MPEG-21 DIDL METS HTML Citation MODS ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads