A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Species richness and rarity of crane flies (Diptera, Tipuloidea) in a boreal mire




AuthorsAutio O, Salmela J, Suhonen J

PublisherSPRINGER

Publication year2013

JournalJournal of Insect Conservation

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF INSECT CONSERVATION

Journal acronymJ INSECT CONSERV

Number in series6

Volume17

Issue6

First page 1125

Last page1136

Number of pages12

ISSN1366-638X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s10841-013-9593-5


Abstract
Species richness and abundance are central in biodiversity inventories and in measuring the structure of communities. Neglecting the assessment of sampling efficiency may lead to spurious estimates of species richness and conservation value. Our aim was to examine species richness, sampling effectiveness, species-abundance distribution (SAD) and rarity of a boreal, mire-dwelling crane fly (Diptera, Tipuloidea) assemblage in western Finland. 12 Malaise traps dispersed in 4 subplots and standardized sweep net samples were used to collect adult flies from the mire. A total of 23 species and 1,569 specimens were identified. In general all species richness estimators were highly correlated and indicated rather good sampling effort. Sample completeness, expressed as percentage of observed richness divided by estimated richness, was higher for mire-dwellers (mean 75 %) than for all species (mean 63 %). Crane fly assemblages of subplots and combined data fitted best with log-series SAD. Species spatial distribution was positively correlated with average abundance. In other words, the most abundant species occurred in the most of Malaise traps. Seven mire-dwelling species greatly outnumbered (94 % of the collected specimens) all other members in the assemblage, and only one observed species was rare by several definitions (local abundance, extent of occurrence in Finland and area of occupancy). Although the studied assemblage was characterized by commonness, five of the species have threatened status in Europe south of Finland. Separate species richness estimation of all species (vagrants and occasional species included) and focal species (here mire-dwellers) is supported if ecological information is available on the taxonomic group being studied.



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