Abstract
Numerous recent studies report an alarming decrease in diversity, biomass, or abundance of arthropods in various habitats. Given that they are important food for other organisms, the ecological consequences of such a decline could be severe. We used data from the Hungarian Forestry Light Trap Network to examine whether the spring caterpillar biomass showed any long term (23–58 years) declining trend in oak-dominated forests. Light trap data for 43 selected macrolepidopteran species (suitable bird food in the larval stage) from six different locations were used for the estimation of the total available caterpillar biomass. Time series analyses showed strong year-to-year fluctuations, and over all locations and time windows there was an increasing rather than decreasing trend. The increase found at some locations may suggest increasing herbivore pressure and negative impacts on forest health. We conclude that foliage-feeding macrolepidopteran species with spring-developing larvae did not show a drastic decrease in recent decades, and food availability in the long term will not negatively influence the breeding success of birds in such forests.
Highlights
Several recent articles show or claim a dramatic decrease in arthropod diversity and biomass [1,2,3]
A serious decline in flying insect biomass is reported over 27 years in 63 nature protection areas in Germany [1]
We found increasing rather than decreasing trends in caterpillar biomass that indicated no food shortage for birds during the breading season
Summary
Several recent articles show or claim a dramatic decrease in arthropod diversity and biomass [1,2,3]. A serious decline in flying insect biomass is reported over 27 years in 63 nature protection areas in Germany [1]. These authors found this decline regardless of habitat type, changes in weather, land use, or habitat characteristics cannot explain this overall pattern. Similar declines were found in the Netherlands [2]. Longterm species loss and homogenisation of moth communities were demonstrated in Hungary [3]. Significant changes in land use are thought to be the main cause
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