Abstract

Although seasonality in the tropics is often less pronounced than in temperate areas, tropical ecosystems show seasonal dynamics as well. Nevertheless, individual tropical insects’ phenological patterns are still poorly understood, especially in the Afrotropics. To fill this gap, we investigated biodiversity patterns of Lepidoptera communities at three rainforest localities in the foothills of Mount Cameroon, West Africa, one of the wettest places in the world. Our multitaxa approach covered six lepidopteran groups (fruit‐feeding butterflies and moths, the families Sphingidae, Saturniidae, and Eupterotidae, and the subfamily Arctiinae of Erebidae) with diverse life strategies. We sampled adults of the focal groups in three distinct seasons. Our sampling included standardized bait trapping (80 traps exposed for 10 days per locality and season) and attraction by light (six full nights per locality and season). Altogether, our dataset comprised 20,576 specimens belonging to 559 (morpho)species of the focal groups. The biodiversity of Lepidoptera generally increased in the high‐dry season, and either increased (fruit‐feeding moths, Arctiinae, Saturniidae) or decreased (butterflies, Sphingidae) in the transition to the wet season in particular groups. Simultaneously, we revealed a strong species turnover of fruit‐feeding Lepidoptera and Arctiinae among the seasons, indicating relatively high specialization of these communities for particular seasons. Such temporal specialization can make the local communities of butterflies and moths especially sensitive to the expected seasonal perturbations caused by the global change. Because of the key role of Lepidoptera across trophic levels, such changes in their communities could strengthen this impact on entire tropical ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Understanding the spatial and temporal dynamics of biodiversity is one of the main goals of current ecology (Magurran, 2007; Rosenzweig, 1995)

  • We address the following questions: (a) How does the extreme seasonality affect species richness, abundance, and diversity of local lepidopteran communities? (b) Are there any phenological patterns in community compositions of individual lepidopteran groups? (c) Are the phenological patterns caused by interseasonal species turnover or community nestedness? (d) Are these phenological patterns consistent across a few unrelated lepidopteran groups?

  • We identified seasonality as a crucial factor for forming adult communities of Lepidoptera in the studied West African tropical rainforest, the phenological patterns slightly differed among the particular groups studied

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Understanding the spatial and temporal dynamics of biodiversity is one of the main goals of current ecology (Magurran, 2007; Rosenzweig, 1995). Several of them detected the main peak of adult Lepidoptera abundances (Intachat et al, 2001) and species richness (Grøtan et al, 2014, 2012 ; Valtonen et al, 2013) with a time lag of two or three months after the beginning of the wet season. Together with the expected shifts in the seasonality timing (Feng et al, 2013), the Afrotropical Lepidoptera communities’ phenology ought to shift or completely change, with unpredictable consequent effects on the related trophic levels To predict such changes, it is firstly necessary to identify the current seasonal patterns of communities. Because Mount Cameroon is one of the rainiest regions in the world, with a strong discrepancy between high‐dry and high‐ wet seasons (Proctor, Edwards, Payton, & Nagy, 2007), we expected distinct seasonal patterns of both species richness and community composition

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.