Abstract

Conservation of larger terrestrial organisms is easier in comparison with arthropods because those groups are more visible, are generally better known and their requirements more likely to have been described and documented. Arthropods are often very small, e.g. the average size of a beetle is 4 mm, and this means that much arthropod biodiversity has thus far not been described. Many arthropod species are of ecological importance and may be regarded as keystone species in their environment without which ecosystems would collapse. Th is has widely been recognized and much research is under way. Nowadays there is an urgency for arthropod biodiversity research because habitats are either being degraded, fragmented or destroyed before a baseline of the arthropod fauna has been recorded and their ecological roles have been understood. Private collections have a role in recording baseline data and may be able to provide important information in identifying indicator species, particularly where land use has changed since the date of collection. Using data from the joint Al Ain and Abu Dhabi Emirates Natural History Group private collection, this paper will illustrate how data collected over more than 20 years can assist with arthropod biodiversity research and conservation.

Highlights

  • For many developed countries worldwide a baseline of insect biodiversity has been established, and studies on insects are largely concentrated on biological and ecological aspects

  • Several species are known from Arabia including J. euphratica J. caillaudi and J. fimbriata that are found in the UAE (Table 1)

  • These were believed to be the only specimens known, but it is quite possible that a further seven specimens collected by Pitcher and identified as J. caillaudi by Bilý reside in the Manchester Museum (MM), UK (Bilý 1985)

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Summary

Introduction

For many developed countries worldwide a baseline of insect biodiversity has been established, and studies on insects are largely concentrated on biological and ecological aspects. At this point the Al Ain chapter of the ENHG inherited the specimens which form part of the Joint Al Ain and Abu Dhabi Emirates Natural History Group (JAAENHG) Insect Collection. Hamer was a member of the ENHG who resided in Abu Dhabi in the 1980’s and who collected principally Hymenoptera, and other insects throughout the UAE.

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