Carabid beetle diversity and distribution in Boston Harbor Islands national park area (Coleoptera, Carabidae)

被引:7
|
作者
Davidson, Robert L. [1 ]
Rykken, Jessica [2 ]
Farrell, Brian [2 ]
机构
[1] Carnegie Museum Nat Hist, Sect Invertebrate Zool, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Museum Comparat Zool, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
关键词
Carabidae; Boston Harbor Islands; biodiversity inventory; introduced species; state records Massachusetts; New York; Pennsylvania; country record U. S; BIODIVERSITY; INVENTORY;
D O I
10.3897/zookeys.147.2111
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
As part of an All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory in Boston Harbor Islands national park area, an inventory of carabid beetles on 13 islands was conducted. Intensive sampling on ten of the islands, using an assortment of passive traps and limited hand collecting, resulted in the capture of 6,194 specimens, comprising 128 species. Among these species were seven new state records for Massachusetts (Acupalpus nanellus, Amara aulica, Amara bifrons, Apenes lucidulus, Bradycellus tantillus, Harpalus rubripes and Laemostenus tern cola terricola-the last also a new country record; in passing we report also new state records for Happalus rubripes from New York and Pennsylvania, Amara ovata from Pennsylvania, and the first mainland New York records for Asaphidion curtum). For most islands, there was a clear relationship between species richness and island area. Two islands, however, Calf and Grape, had far more species than their relatively small size would predict. Freshwater marshes on these islands, along with a suite of hygrophilous species, suggested that habitat diversity plays an important role in island species richness. Introduced species (18) comprised 14.0% of the total observed species richness, compared to 5.5% (17 out of 306 species) documented for Rhode Island. We surmise that the higher proportion of introduced species on the islands is, in part, due to a higher proportion of disturbed and open habitats as well as high rates of human traffic. We predict that more active sampling in specialized habitats would bring the total carabid fauna of the Boston Harbor Islands closer to that of Rhode Island or eastern Massachusetts in richness and composition; however, isolation, human disturbance and traffic, and limited habitat diversity all contribute to reducing the species pool on the islands relative to that on the mainland.
引用
收藏
页码:497 / 526
页数:30
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Year-to-year variation in carabid beetle (Coleoptera, Carabidae) assemblages on the Aland Islands, south-west Finland
    Kotze, DJ
    Niemelä, J
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2002, 29 (03) : 375 - 386
  • [22] The carabid beetle fauna (Coleoptera, Carabidae) of a traditional garden in the Hrvatsko Zagorje region
    Stancic, Zvjezdana
    Brigic, Andreja
    Vujcic-Karlo, Snjezana
    PERIODICUM BIOLOGORUM, 2010, 112 (02) : 193 - 199
  • [23] Metal Pollution and Fat Accumulation in the Carabid Beetle Pterostichus melanarius (Coleoptera, Carabidae)
    L. Lindqvist
    M. Block
    Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 2001, 66 (2) : 184 - 188
  • [24] Complete mitochondrial genome of a carabid beetle, Damaster mirabilissimus mirabilissim (Coleoptera: Carabidae)
    Wan, Xinlong
    Hong, Mee Yeon
    Liao, Aimei
    Kim, Man Il
    Kim, Ki-Gyoung
    Han, Yeon Soo
    Kim, Iksoo
    ENTOMOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2012, 42 (01) : 44 - 54
  • [25] Species decline—but why? Explanations of carabid beetle (Coleoptera, Carabidae) declines in Europe
    D. Johan Kotze
    Robert B. O'Hara
    Oecologia, 2003, 135 : 138 - 148
  • [26] Multiscale drivers of carabid beetle (Coleoptera: Carabidae) assemblages in small European woodlands
    Marrec, Ronan
    Le Roux, Vincent
    Martin, Ludmilla
    Lenoir, Jonathan
    Brunet, Jorg
    Cousins, Sara A. O.
    De Smedt, Pallieter
    Deconchat, Marc
    Diekmann, Martin
    Ehrmann, Steffen
    Gallet-Moron, Emilie
    Giffard, Brice
    Liira, Jaan
    Lindgren, Jessica
    Valdes, Alicia
    Verheyen, Kris
    Wulf, Monika
    Decocq, Guillaume
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2021, 30 (01): : 165 - 182
  • [27] Metal pollution and fat accumulation in the carabid beetle Pterostichus melanarius (Coleoptera, Carabidae)
    Lindqvist, L
    Block, M
    BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY, 2001, 66 (02) : 184 - 188
  • [28] SUCCESSIONAL CHANGES IN A SALT-MARSH CARABID BEETLE (COLEOPTERA, CARABIDAE) COMMUNITY AFTER EMBANKMENT OF THE MARKIEZAAT AREA
    VERSCHOOR, BC
    KREBS, BPM
    PEDOBIOLOGIA, 1995, 39 (05) : 385 - 404
  • [29] CARABID TAXOCENES OF AN URBAN PARK IN SUBTROPICAL BRAZIL .2. SPECIFIC DIVERSITY AND SIMILARITY (INSECTA, COLEOPTERA, CARABIDAE)
    DIEFENBACH, LMG
    BECKER, M
    STUDIES ON NEOTROPICAL FAUNA AND ENVIRONMENT, 1992, 27 (04) : 189 - 200
  • [30] Species decline - but why? Explanations of carabid beetle (Coleoptera, Carabidae) declines in Europe
    Kotze, DJ
    O'Hara, RB
    OECOLOGIA, 2003, 135 (01) : 138 - 148