Thursday, 29 June 2023

The Amazing Colour Changing Bug

Amblytylus nasutus

We have very few records for Amblytylus nasutus in VC55 (Leicestershire & Rutland). The species seems to be expanding its range and records have been coming in steadily for the last couple of weeks. I took this specimen in Rutland this week and at first I was unsure of the ID because of the black marks on the pronotum (other species of Amblytylus are available!). The answer seems to be that this is a male, male Mirids often being more vividly marked than females. However: 

Amblytylus nasutus

On being left in a pot (in the dark) overnight, by next morning the black marks had virtually disappeared. Just to confirm nothing funny was going on, I checked the aedeagus: 

Amblytylus nasutus aedeagus

Yup, bona fide Amblytylus nasutus. Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you the amazing colour changing bug. 

 





Friday, 9 June 2023

Monitoring and Benchmarking Insects

Useful paper with a comparison of entomological methods for surveys. Marred only by the fact that it fails to consider spiders! 

Montgomery, G. A., Belitz, M. W., Guralnick, R. P., & Tingley, M. W. (2021). Standards and best practices for monitoring and benchmarking insects. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 513. https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2020.579193

"Benchmark studies of insect populations are increasingly relevant and needed amid accelerating concern about insect trends in the Anthropocene. The growing recognition that insect populations may be in decline has given rise to a renewed call for insect population monitoring by scientists, and a desire from the broader public to participate in insect surveys. However, due to the immense diversity of insects and a vast assortment of data collection methods, there is a general lack of standardization in insect monitoring methods, such that a sudden and unplanned expansion of data collection may fail to meet its ecological potential or conservation needs without a coordinated focus on standards and best practices. To begin to address this problem, we provide simple guidelines for maximizing return on proven inventory methods that will provide insect benchmarking data suitable for a variety of ecological responses, including occurrence and distribution, phenology, abundance and biomass, and diversity and species composition. To track these responses, we present seven primary insect sampling methods—malaise trapping, light trapping, pan trapping, pitfall trappings, beating sheets, acoustic monitoring, and active visual surveys—and recommend standards while highlighting examples of model programs. For each method, we discuss key topics such as recommended spatial and temporal scales of sampling, important metadata to track, and degree of replication needed to produce rigorous estimates of ecological responses. We additionally suggest protocols for scalable insect monitoring, from backyards to national parks. Overall, we aim to compile a resource that can be used by diverse individuals and organizations seeking to initiate or improve insect monitoring programs in this era of rapid change."