Diversity and eco-geographical distribution of insects

This chapter presents an integrative analysis on diversity levels, distributional patterns, and the implications of habitat preferences and geographic distributions of insect groups in the Yucatán Peninsula. Over 3000 insect species have been documented in the Yucatán Peninsula. Yet the number of species recorded may represent no more than 20-30 % of the total number of species. Taxonomic orders that recorded the highest number of species were: diurnal Lepidoptera (N¼510 species), Hymenoptera (602), and Coleoptera (478). Differences in insect species numbers for the three peninsular states were largely due to differences in sampling efforts. Maximum entropy models that were applied to a range of insect species showed that most suitable areas were fairly well distributed towards central and southern areas of the Yucatán Peninsula, with some spatial distributions matching "El Petén" or arid/dry Yucatán, while some others showed rather 'idiosyncratic' distributions. The habitat and geographic categories analysis of 221 butterfly species revealed a declining proportion of species that were restricted to primary habitats with increasing geographic range (χ2¼11.23, df¼2, p¼0.004), and an increasing proportion of widespread butterfly species that make use of modified habitats (χ2¼40.7, df¼2, p<0.001). The present status of butterfly diversity (and perhaps many other insects) in the Yucatán Peninsula revealed important changes in species composition (i.e. the prevalence of a large fraction of weedy species). It is possible that dramatic habitat changes over much of the peninsula throughout the course of its history, together with the current accelerated impact of habitat modification might have precipitated changes in species composition and diversity.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: León Cortés, Jorge Leonel Doctor autor 7292, Caballero Pérez, Ubaldo Maestro autor 14127, Almaraz Almaraz, Marisol Esther Maestra autora 15903
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Insectos, Preferencias de hábitat, Ecología de los insectos, Zoogeografía, Artfrosur,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-06529-8_9
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:7261
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Insectos
Preferencias de hábitat
Ecología de los insectos
Zoogeografía
Artfrosur
Insectos
Preferencias de hábitat
Ecología de los insectos
Zoogeografía
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Insectos
Preferencias de hábitat
Ecología de los insectos
Zoogeografía
Artfrosur
Insectos
Preferencias de hábitat
Ecología de los insectos
Zoogeografía
Artfrosur
León Cortés, Jorge Leonel Doctor autor 7292
Caballero Pérez, Ubaldo Maestro autor 14127
Almaraz Almaraz, Marisol Esther Maestra autora 15903
Diversity and eco-geographical distribution of insects
description This chapter presents an integrative analysis on diversity levels, distributional patterns, and the implications of habitat preferences and geographic distributions of insect groups in the Yucatán Peninsula. Over 3000 insect species have been documented in the Yucatán Peninsula. Yet the number of species recorded may represent no more than 20-30 % of the total number of species. Taxonomic orders that recorded the highest number of species were: diurnal Lepidoptera (N¼510 species), Hymenoptera (602), and Coleoptera (478). Differences in insect species numbers for the three peninsular states were largely due to differences in sampling efforts. Maximum entropy models that were applied to a range of insect species showed that most suitable areas were fairly well distributed towards central and southern areas of the Yucatán Peninsula, with some spatial distributions matching "El Petén" or arid/dry Yucatán, while some others showed rather 'idiosyncratic' distributions. The habitat and geographic categories analysis of 221 butterfly species revealed a declining proportion of species that were restricted to primary habitats with increasing geographic range (χ2¼11.23, df¼2, p¼0.004), and an increasing proportion of widespread butterfly species that make use of modified habitats (χ2¼40.7, df¼2, p<0.001). The present status of butterfly diversity (and perhaps many other insects) in the Yucatán Peninsula revealed important changes in species composition (i.e. the prevalence of a large fraction of weedy species). It is possible that dramatic habitat changes over much of the peninsula throughout the course of its history, together with the current accelerated impact of habitat modification might have precipitated changes in species composition and diversity.
format Texto
topic_facet Insectos
Preferencias de hábitat
Ecología de los insectos
Zoogeografía
Artfrosur
author León Cortés, Jorge Leonel Doctor autor 7292
Caballero Pérez, Ubaldo Maestro autor 14127
Almaraz Almaraz, Marisol Esther Maestra autora 15903
author_facet León Cortés, Jorge Leonel Doctor autor 7292
Caballero Pérez, Ubaldo Maestro autor 14127
Almaraz Almaraz, Marisol Esther Maestra autora 15903
author_sort León Cortés, Jorge Leonel Doctor autor 7292
title Diversity and eco-geographical distribution of insects
title_short Diversity and eco-geographical distribution of insects
title_full Diversity and eco-geographical distribution of insects
title_fullStr Diversity and eco-geographical distribution of insects
title_full_unstemmed Diversity and eco-geographical distribution of insects
title_sort diversity and eco-geographical distribution of insects
url https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-06529-8_9
work_keys_str_mv AT leoncortesjorgeleoneldoctorautor7292 diversityandecogeographicaldistributionofinsects
AT caballeroperezubaldomaestroautor14127 diversityandecogeographicaldistributionofinsects
AT almarazalmarazmarisolesthermaestraautora15903 diversityandecogeographicaldistributionofinsects
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:72612024-07-16T11:26:32ZDiversity and eco-geographical distribution of insects León Cortés, Jorge Leonel Doctor autor 7292 Caballero Pérez, Ubaldo Maestro autor 14127 Almaraz Almaraz, Marisol Esther Maestra autora 15903 textengThis chapter presents an integrative analysis on diversity levels, distributional patterns, and the implications of habitat preferences and geographic distributions of insect groups in the Yucatán Peninsula. Over 3000 insect species have been documented in the Yucatán Peninsula. Yet the number of species recorded may represent no more than 20-30 % of the total number of species. Taxonomic orders that recorded the highest number of species were: diurnal Lepidoptera (N¼510 species), Hymenoptera (602), and Coleoptera (478). Differences in insect species numbers for the three peninsular states were largely due to differences in sampling efforts. Maximum entropy models that were applied to a range of insect species showed that most suitable areas were fairly well distributed towards central and southern areas of the Yucatán Peninsula, with some spatial distributions matching "El Petén" or arid/dry Yucatán, while some others showed rather 'idiosyncratic' distributions. The habitat and geographic categories analysis of 221 butterfly species revealed a declining proportion of species that were restricted to primary habitats with increasing geographic range (χ2¼11.23, df¼2, p¼0.004), and an increasing proportion of widespread butterfly species that make use of modified habitats (χ2¼40.7, df¼2, p<0.001). The present status of butterfly diversity (and perhaps many other insects) in the Yucatán Peninsula revealed important changes in species composition (i.e. the prevalence of a large fraction of weedy species). It is possible that dramatic habitat changes over much of the peninsula throughout the course of its history, together with the current accelerated impact of habitat modification might have precipitated changes in species composition and diversity.This chapter presents an integrative analysis on diversity levels, distributional patterns, and the implications of habitat preferences and geographic distributions of insect groups in the Yucatán Peninsula. Over 3000 insect species have been documented in the Yucatán Peninsula. Yet the number of species recorded may represent no more than 20-30 % of the total number of species. Taxonomic orders that recorded the highest number of species were: diurnal Lepidoptera (N¼510 species), Hymenoptera (602), and Coleoptera (478). Differences in insect species numbers for the three peninsular states were largely due to differences in sampling efforts. Maximum entropy models that were applied to a range of insect species showed that most suitable areas were fairly well distributed towards central and southern areas of the Yucatán Peninsula, with some spatial distributions matching "El Petén" or arid/dry Yucatán, while some others showed rather 'idiosyncratic' distributions. The habitat and geographic categories analysis of 221 butterfly species revealed a declining proportion of species that were restricted to primary habitats with increasing geographic range (χ2¼11.23, df¼2, p¼0.004), and an increasing proportion of widespread butterfly species that make use of modified habitats (χ2¼40.7, df¼2, p<0.001). The present status of butterfly diversity (and perhaps many other insects) in the Yucatán Peninsula revealed important changes in species composition (i.e. the prevalence of a large fraction of weedy species). It is possible that dramatic habitat changes over much of the peninsula throughout the course of its history, together with the current accelerated impact of habitat modification might have precipitated changes in species composition and diversity.InsectosPreferencias de hábitatEcología de los insectosZoogeografíaArtfrosurBiodiversity and conservation of the Yucatan Peninsula / Gerald Alexander Islebe, Sophie Calmé, Jorge L. Leon-Cortés, Birgit Schmook, editorshttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-06529-8_9Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso