Moth biomass has fluctuated over 50 years in Britain but lacks a clear trend

Macgregor, C. J., Williams, J. H., Bell, JamesORCID logo and Thomas, C. D. (2019) Moth biomass has fluctuated over 50 years in Britain but lacks a clear trend. Nature Ecology & Evolution. 10.1038/s41559-019-1028-6
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Steep insect biomass declines ('insectageddon') have been widely reported, despite a lack of continuously collected biomass data from replicated long-term monitoring sites. Such severe declines are not supported by the world’s longest running insect population database: annual moth biomass estimates from British fixed monitoring sites revealed increasing biomass between 1967 and 1982, followed by gradual decline from 1982 to 2017, with a 2.2-fold net gain in mean biomass between the first (1967–1976) and last decades (2008–2017) of monitoring. High between-year variability and multi-year periodicity in biomass emphasize the need for long-term data to detect trends and identify their causes robustly.


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Macgregor et al. 2019 Moth biomass declines. Nature Ecology & Evolution (accepted draft).pdf
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