Bimodal seasonal activity of moths and elevation, weather and land use as drivers of their diversity

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Authors

Felix Neff , Yannick Chittaro, Fränzi Korner-Nievergelt, Glenn Litsios, Emmanuel Rey, Eva Knop

Abstract

Moths are an important part of terrestrial insect diversity and contribute substantially to ecosys-tem functioning. Yet, how their activity varies with the season and how different biotic and abiotic factors (elevation, weather, land use) are simultaneously linked to moth community characteristics are still poorly understood. We analysed a vast moth community dataset from Switzerland collected by a single expert across 50 years containing data of 2.8 Mio moth individuals (1,045 species), covering the whole yearly cycle. Using regression models, we related moth community characteristics (total abundance, species richness, biomass) to season, elevation, weather and land use (landscape composition). Moth community characteristics showed a clear bimodal seasonal cycle with an activity peak in early spring and one in summer. The different peaks could be clearly linked to moth species with different overwintering stages, i.e. the spring peak was driven by species overwintering as pupae or adults. Along the elevational gradient, we found increases of all moth community characteristics, levelling of at around 2000 m asl. Also, moth activity increased significantly with increasing temperatures and was higher in landscapes with higher proportions of forests. Based on a moth dataset of unseen extent, we present a well resolved seasonal activity pattern and quantify the role of elevation, landscape composition (forests) and weather (temperature) in driving moth community characteristics. These results will help to better understand variation in moth activity across different temporal and spatial scales and to design targeted conservation efforts, e.g. in lower elevation sites.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.32942/X2NS6Q

Subjects

Biodiversity, Entomology, Life Sciences, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology

Keywords

Community, elevation, forest, insects, land use, lepidoptera, moths, phenology, season, Weather

Dates

Published: 2024-07-23 10:41

Last Updated: 2024-07-25 01:08

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License

CC-BY Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Language:
English

Data and Code Availability Statement:
The raw moths records data is hosted by info fauna and protected by a code of conduct, but might be obtained from info fauna upon request when in accordance with this code of conduct. Moths records data at coarser spatial resolution and with unique identifier for the sampling lo-cation and sampling details necessary to reproduce the models will be made available through the GBIF database. The weather data are under restricted access but might be directly obtained from MeteoSwiss (https://www.meteoswiss.admin.ch). Other data and codes necessary to re-produce the analyses are available from the GitHub repository located at https://github.com/nefff1/moths-CH-Reser.