2017
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0185683
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Are pollinating hawk moths declining in the Northeastern United States? An analysis of collection records

Abstract: Increasing attention to pollinators and their role in providing ecosystem services has revealed a paucity of studies on long-term population trends of most insect pollinators in many parts of the world. Because targeted monitoring programs are resource intensive and unlikely to be performed on most insect pollinators, we took advantage of existing collection records to examine long-term trends in northeastern United States populations of 26 species of hawk moths (family Sphingidae) that are presumed to be poll… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…In two studies, body size (forewing length) was the single best predictor of declining populations (70,71). Reports from the northeast United States also draw attention to the decline of larger moths (72,73). Other traits shared by declining moths include univoltinism, short flight seasons, low dispersal ability, and overwintering in the egg stage (21,67,68,70,71,74).…”
Section: Common Traits Among Moth Taxa That Are Decliningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In two studies, body size (forewing length) was the single best predictor of declining populations (70,71). Reports from the northeast United States also draw attention to the decline of larger moths (72,73). Other traits shared by declining moths include univoltinism, short flight seasons, low dispersal ability, and overwintering in the egg stage (21,67,68,70,71,74).…”
Section: Common Traits Among Moth Taxa That Are Decliningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, achieving this requires adequate funding [35]. Where digitization has been completed, the data provide a rich source of information, allowing assessment of the current status and long-term trends of pollinator populations [18,20,36]. This is despite the fact that museum collections often have a number of biases, including unknown sampling effort, personal interests of collectors and the curatorial…”
Section: Using Historical Collection Specimen Records To Fill Knowledmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several factors can be attributed to the worldwide decline in moth population including habitat loss, degradation and fragmentation, agricultural intensification, changes in woodland management, urbanization, chemical pollution, artificial light at night and climate (Dennis et al, 2019). A number of plant species depend exclusively on one or a small number of moth species for pollination and a decline in those moth population and their diversity might lead to a negative impact in the plant communities they pollinate (Young et al, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%