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National Academy of Sciences, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 20(104), p. 8368-8373, 2007

DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0611462104

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Habitat specialization, body size, and family identity explain lepidopteran density–area relationships in a cross-continental comparison

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Habitat fragmentation may strongly affect species density, species interactions, and the rate of ecosystem processes. It is therefore important to understand the observed variability among species responses to fragmentation and the underlying mechanisms. In this study, we compare density–area relationships (DARs) for 344 lepidopteran species belonging to 22 families (butterflies and moths). This analysis suggested that the DAR slope is generally positive for moths and negative for butterflies. The differences are suggested to occur because moths are largely olfactory searchers, whereas most butterflies are visual searchers. The analysis also suggests that DARs vary as a function of habitat specialization and body size. In butterflies, generalist species had a more negative DAR slope than specialist species because of a lower patch size threshold. In moths, the differences in DAR slope between forest and open habitat species were large for small species but absent for large species. This difference is argued to occur because the DAR slope in large species mainly reflects their search mode, which does not necessarily vary between moth groups, whereas the slope in small species reflects population growth rates.