30 years of terrestrial insect richness patterns across elevation: What have we learned? A global meta-analysis
Data files
Sep 16, 2024 version files 92.04 KB
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input.csv
61.37 KB
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input2.csv
29.39 KB
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README.md
1.28 KB
Abstract
Understanding elevation variation in biodiversity is a classic question in ecology and has implications for understanding climate change impacts on mountain ecosystems. While insects are the largest group of animals, the global trend in insect species richness with elevation is unknown. To date, single studies and taxa-specific syntheses have provided no single picture, finding variable patterns of insect richness with elevation. A global synthesis across systems would provide a better understanding of how insect species richness changes with elevation, and the possible environmental correlates of those patterns. We used published studies of terrestrial insect elevation gradients from 1990-2020 to ask: How does insect species richness change with elevation, and which environmental variables best explain this relationship statistically? With 1486 sites spanning 151 species richness-elevation gradients from 80 studies from 4 diverse insect taxonomic groups and 5 biomes, we found that overall proportional richness reached a low elevation plateau and then decreased. We also show that mean annual temperature and seasonality best explained this trend. We suggest best practices and areas of interest for the future of insect richness elevation studies, including underrepresented groups, geographic areas, and more-standardized methods.
README
"input2" - statistic input for the abiotic data subset
Contains:
studyid: ID of the paper used
gradientid: ID of the gradient within the paper
ndvi: NDVI data for year that the study collected insects (no units)
average.ndvi: average ndvi for 3 years surrounding collection year (no units)
latitude: latitude
longitude: longitude
temperature: mean annual temperature from worldclim (degree celcius)
precipitation: total annual precipitation from worldclim (mm)
temp.seasonality: temperature seasonality from worldclim (no units)
taxa: order of insect studied per gradient
elevation: elevation site (meters above sea level)
richness: richness of taxa (number of species)
biome: biome studied, (T)ropical, (TE)mperate, (M)editteranean, (D)essert, (A)lpine
precip.seasonality: precipitation seasonality from worldclim (no units)
"input" - statistical input for all gradients
studyid: ID of the paper used
gradientid: ID of the gradient within the paper
taxa: order of insect studied per gradient
elevation: elevation site (meters above sea level)
richness: richness of taxa (number of species)
biome: biome studied, (T)ropical, (TE)mperate, (M)editteranean, (D)essert, (A)lpine
highest.elevation: highest elevation site per gradient (meters above sea level)