Tropical beetles more sensitive to impacts are less likely to be known to science
File(s)MJWB Staphylinid Paper v5.0 laa.docx (592.73 KB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Insects are posited to be declining globally. This is particularly pertinent in tropical forests, which exhibit both the highest levels of biodiversity and the highest rates of biodiversity loss. However, for the hyper-diverse tropical insects there are scant data available to evidence declines. Understanding tropical insect diversity and its response to environmental change has therefore become a challenge, but it is estimated that 80% of tropical insect species remain undescribed1. Insect biodiversity predictions are based mostly on well-studied taxa and extrapolated to other groups, but no one knows whether resilience to environmental change varies between undescribed and described species. Here, we collected staphylinid beetles from unlogged and logged tropical forests in Borneo and investigated their responses to environmental change. Out of 252 morphospecies collected, 76% were undescribed. Undescribed species showed higher community turnover, reduced abundance and decreased probability of occurrence in logged forests. Thus the unknown components of tropical insect biodiversity are likely more impacted by human-induced environmental change. If these patterns are widespread, how accurate will assessments of insect declines in the tropics be?
Date Issued
2024-08-19
Date Acceptance
2024-06-25
Citation
Current Biology, 2024, 34 (16), pp.R770-R771
ISSN
0960-9822
Publisher
Cell Press
Start Page
R770
End Page
R771
Journal / Book Title
Current Biology
Volume
34
Issue
16
Copyright Statement
Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. This is the author’s accepted manuscript made available under a CC-BY licence in accordance with Imperial’s Research Publications Open Access policy (www.imperial.ac.uk/oa-policy)
License URL
Identifier
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/39163835
Subjects
Animals
Biodiversity
Borneo
Coleoptera
Forests
Tropical Climate
Publication Status
Published
Coverage Spatial
England
Date Publish Online
2024-08-19