660 likes | 810 Views
Exploring the Southern Hemisphere: Plant Bug Planetary Biodiversity Inventory Field Work in Australia and South Africa presented by Randall T. Schuh Curator and Chair Division of Invertebrate Zoology American Museum of Natural History, New York. Planetary Biodiversity Inventories.
E N D
Exploring the Southern Hemisphere: Plant Bug Planetary Biodiversity Inventory Field Work in Australia and South Africa presented by Randall T. Schuh Curator and Chair Division of Invertebrate Zoology American Museum of Natural History, New York
Planetary Biodiversity Inventories Funding: US National Science Foundation, 2003 Criteria: Worldwide and monophyletic taxa Duration: 5 years Projects: Eumycetozoa (slime molds): 1000 species Solanum (Solanaceae): 1500 species Miridae (Heteroptera): 5000 species Siluriformes (cat fishes): 2500 species http://research.amnh.org/pbi
Heteroptera: True Bugs • 7 infraorders • 85 families • 40,000 species described
Miridae: Plant Bugs • Infraorder: • Cimicomorpha • 1,350 valid genera • 10,200 valid species • mostly phytophagous • high host specificity • many myrmecomorphic • some aposematic
PBI Target Taxa: Orthotylinae and Phylinae • Status as of 2003 • 8 recognized tribes • 485 described genera • 3900 described species • ~ 1400 published hosts • ~ 90 new genera • ~ 1200 new species in collections
Field Work Fundamentals • Application of taxon focused techniques • Maximize discovery of new taxa • Extend geographic coverage • Maximize host/biological information • Maximize specimen quality • Maximize specimen numbers
Processing host vouchers, Sept. 2004, Compton Herbarium, Cape Town Vouchers ready for drying
Species Accumulation in the Orthotylinae and Phylinae Palearctic Nearctic Neotropical Ethiopian Oriental Australian
North American Orthotylinae and Phylinae • 550 described species • 25 % of known world fauna • >200,000 specimens in collections • flora of ~ 9000 seed plant species • ~ 500 published hosts
Major North American Host Groups • Asteraceae (Ambrosia, Artemisia, etc.) • Chenopodiaceae (Atriplex, Sarcobatus, etc.) • Fabaceae (Acacia, Prosopis, Psorothamnus, etc.) • Fagaceae (Quercus) • Pinaceae (Pinus, Abies, etc.) • Rhamnaceae (Ceanothus, Rhamnus, Zizyphus) • Rosaceae (Cercocarpus, Purshia, Rosa, etc.) • Salicaceae (Populus, Salix)
SOUTH AFRICAN FIELD WORK Western Cape as a PBI target area: Namaqualand–Little Karoo–Fynbos • Extreme plant diversity and endemism • Unique biotic affinities • Limited prior sampling • Few publications and described taxa • Unstudied by classical & modern authors • No local specialists
South African Orthotylinae and Phylinae: 1961, 1974 1961 – Carvalho, South African Animal Life 12 described species0 documented hosts 250 specimens studied 1974 – Schuh,Published Dissertation 100 described species: + 850% 50 documented hosts 2000 specimens studied: + 800%
South Africa: 2003, 2004 Localities >120 localities
South African Orthotylinae and Phylinae, 2005 • > 250 species: + 250% • > 350 documented hosts: + 700% • > 20,000 specimens: + 1000%
AUSTRALIAN FIELD WORK Australia as a PBI target area • High plant diversity and endemicity, especially in west and southwest • Limited sampling • Few publications and described taxa • No local specialists historically
Australian Miridae, 1994 • 180 described species • (~ 75 Orthotylinae and Phylinae) • 1.8% of known world fauna • ~ 500 species in collections • 25,000 specimens in collections • Flora of ~ 18,000 seed plant species • 35 published host records
Australia: 1995--2002 Localities >400 localities
Australian Miridae: 2002 • 210 described species: + 15% • (90 Orthotylinae and Phylinae) • > 1,500 spp. in collections: + 300% • > 100,000 specimens: + 400% • (80% Orthotylinae and Phylinae) • 1,400 documented hosts: + 4000%