4.8 Article

Insect biomass decline scaled to species diversity: General patterns derived from a hoverfly community

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2002554117

Keywords

biodiversity loss; insect decline; temporal scaling

Funding

  1. Dutch Research Council (NWO) [840.11.001, 841.11.007]
  2. Bezirksregierung Koln
  3. Bergischer Naturschutzverein
  4. Rhein-Sieg Kreis
  5. Land Nordrhein-Westfalen-Europaische Gemeinschaft Europaischer Landschaftsfonds fur die Entwicklung des landlichen Raums (ELER)
  6. F + E Biodiversitatsverluste in Fauna-Flora-Habitatrichtlinie-Lebensraumtypen (FFH-LRT) FFH-LRT des Offenlandes, gefordert durch das Bundesamt fur Naturschutz mit Mitteln des Bundesministerium fur Umwelt, Naturschutz und nukleare Sicherheit (BMU)

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The study reveals a correlation between declines in flying insect biomass, hoverfly abundance, and species richness, with rare species showing expected decline rates. This suggests that large declines in insect biomass may predict declines in insect diversity.
Reports of declines in biomass of flying insects have alarmed the world in recent years. However, how biomass declines reflect biodiversity loss is still an open question. Here, we analyze the abundance (19,604 individuals) of 162 hoverfly species (Diptera: Syrphidae), at six locations in German nature reserves in 1989 and 2014, and generalize the results with a model varying decline rates of common vs. rare species. We show isometric decline rates between total insect biomass and total hoverfly abundance and a scale-dependent decline in hoverfly species richness, ranging between -23% over the season to -82% at the daily level. We constructed a theoretical null model to explore how strong declines in total abundance translate to changing rank-abundance curves, species persistence, and diversity measures. Observed persistence rates were disproportionately lower than expected for species of intermediate abundance, while the rarest species showed decline and appearance rates consistent with random expectation. Our results suggest that large insect biomass declines are predictive of insect diversity declines. Under current threats, even the more common species are in peril, calling for a reevaluation of hazards and conservation strategies that traditionally target already rare and endangered species only.

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