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Insect collecting bias in Arizona with a preliminary checklist of the beetles from the Sand Tank Mountains

BACKGROUND: The State of Arizona in the south-western United States supports a high diversity of insects. Digitised occurrence records, especially from preserved specimens in natural history collections, are an important and growing resource to understand biodiversity and biogeography. Underlying bi...

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Autores principales: Johnston, M. Andrew, Waite, Evan S., Wright, Ethan R, Reily, Brian H., De Leon, Gilma Juanita, Esquivel, Angela Iran, Kerwin, Jacob, Salazar, Maria, Sarmiento, Emiliano, Thiatmaja, Tommy, Lee, Sangmi, Yule, Kelsey, Franz, Nico
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pensoft Publishers 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10323768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37427371
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.11.e101960
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author Johnston, M. Andrew
Waite, Evan S.
Wright, Ethan R
Reily, Brian H.
De Leon, Gilma Juanita
Esquivel, Angela Iran
Kerwin, Jacob
Salazar, Maria
Sarmiento, Emiliano
Thiatmaja, Tommy
Lee, Sangmi
Yule, Kelsey
Franz, Nico
author_facet Johnston, M. Andrew
Waite, Evan S.
Wright, Ethan R
Reily, Brian H.
De Leon, Gilma Juanita
Esquivel, Angela Iran
Kerwin, Jacob
Salazar, Maria
Sarmiento, Emiliano
Thiatmaja, Tommy
Lee, Sangmi
Yule, Kelsey
Franz, Nico
author_sort Johnston, M. Andrew
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The State of Arizona in the south-western United States supports a high diversity of insects. Digitised occurrence records, especially from preserved specimens in natural history collections, are an important and growing resource to understand biodiversity and biogeography. Underlying bias in how insects are collected and what that means for interpreting patterns of insect diversity is largely untested. To explore the effects of insect collecting bias in Arizona, the State was regionalised into specific areas. First, the entire State was divided into broad biogeographic areas by ecoregion. Second, the 81 tallest mountain ranges were mapped on to the State. The distribution of digitised records across these areas were then examined. A case study of surveying the beetles (Insecta, Coleoptera) of the Sand Tank Mountains is presented. The Sand Tanks are a low-elevation range in the Lower Colorado River Basin subregion of the Sonoran Desert from which a single beetle record was published before this study. NEW INFORMATION: The number of occurrence records and collecting events are very unevenly distributed throughout Arizona and do not strongly correlate with the geographic size of areas. Species richness is estimated for regions in Arizona using rarefaction and extrapolation. Digitised records from the disproportionately highly collected areas in Arizona represent at best 70% the total insect diversity within them. We report a total of 141 species of Coleoptera from the Sand Tank Mountains, based on 914 digitised voucher specimens. These specimens add important new records for taxa that were previously unavailable in digitised data and highlight important biogeographic ranges. Possible underlying mechanisms causing bias are discussed and recommendations are made for future targeted collecting of under-sampled regions. Insect species diversity is apparently at best 70% documented for the State of Arizona with many thousands of species not yet recorded. The Chiricahua Mountains are the most densely sampled region of Arizona and likely contain at least 2,000 species not yet vouchered in online data. Preliminary estimates for species richness of Arizona are at least 21,000 and likely much higher. Limitations to analyses are discussed which highlight the strong need for more insect occurrence data.
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spelling pubmed-103237682023-07-07 Insect collecting bias in Arizona with a preliminary checklist of the beetles from the Sand Tank Mountains Johnston, M. Andrew Waite, Evan S. Wright, Ethan R Reily, Brian H. De Leon, Gilma Juanita Esquivel, Angela Iran Kerwin, Jacob Salazar, Maria Sarmiento, Emiliano Thiatmaja, Tommy Lee, Sangmi Yule, Kelsey Franz, Nico Biodivers Data J Taxonomy & Inventories BACKGROUND: The State of Arizona in the south-western United States supports a high diversity of insects. Digitised occurrence records, especially from preserved specimens in natural history collections, are an important and growing resource to understand biodiversity and biogeography. Underlying bias in how insects are collected and what that means for interpreting patterns of insect diversity is largely untested. To explore the effects of insect collecting bias in Arizona, the State was regionalised into specific areas. First, the entire State was divided into broad biogeographic areas by ecoregion. Second, the 81 tallest mountain ranges were mapped on to the State. The distribution of digitised records across these areas were then examined. A case study of surveying the beetles (Insecta, Coleoptera) of the Sand Tank Mountains is presented. The Sand Tanks are a low-elevation range in the Lower Colorado River Basin subregion of the Sonoran Desert from which a single beetle record was published before this study. NEW INFORMATION: The number of occurrence records and collecting events are very unevenly distributed throughout Arizona and do not strongly correlate with the geographic size of areas. Species richness is estimated for regions in Arizona using rarefaction and extrapolation. Digitised records from the disproportionately highly collected areas in Arizona represent at best 70% the total insect diversity within them. We report a total of 141 species of Coleoptera from the Sand Tank Mountains, based on 914 digitised voucher specimens. These specimens add important new records for taxa that were previously unavailable in digitised data and highlight important biogeographic ranges. Possible underlying mechanisms causing bias are discussed and recommendations are made for future targeted collecting of under-sampled regions. Insect species diversity is apparently at best 70% documented for the State of Arizona with many thousands of species not yet recorded. The Chiricahua Mountains are the most densely sampled region of Arizona and likely contain at least 2,000 species not yet vouchered in online data. Preliminary estimates for species richness of Arizona are at least 21,000 and likely much higher. Limitations to analyses are discussed which highlight the strong need for more insect occurrence data. Pensoft Publishers 2023-06-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10323768/ /pubmed/37427371 http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.11.e101960 Text en M. Andrew Johnston, Evan S. Waite, Ethan R Wright, Brian H. Reily, Gilma Juanita De Leon, Angela Iran Esquivel, Jacob Kerwin, Maria Salazar, Emiliano Sarmiento, Tommy Thiatmaja, Sangmi Lee, Kelsey Yule, Nico Franz https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Taxonomy & Inventories
Johnston, M. Andrew
Waite, Evan S.
Wright, Ethan R
Reily, Brian H.
De Leon, Gilma Juanita
Esquivel, Angela Iran
Kerwin, Jacob
Salazar, Maria
Sarmiento, Emiliano
Thiatmaja, Tommy
Lee, Sangmi
Yule, Kelsey
Franz, Nico
Insect collecting bias in Arizona with a preliminary checklist of the beetles from the Sand Tank Mountains
title Insect collecting bias in Arizona with a preliminary checklist of the beetles from the Sand Tank Mountains
title_full Insect collecting bias in Arizona with a preliminary checklist of the beetles from the Sand Tank Mountains
title_fullStr Insect collecting bias in Arizona with a preliminary checklist of the beetles from the Sand Tank Mountains
title_full_unstemmed Insect collecting bias in Arizona with a preliminary checklist of the beetles from the Sand Tank Mountains
title_short Insect collecting bias in Arizona with a preliminary checklist of the beetles from the Sand Tank Mountains
title_sort insect collecting bias in arizona with a preliminary checklist of the beetles from the sand tank mountains
topic Taxonomy & Inventories
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10323768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37427371
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.11.e101960
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