Browse > Article
http://dx.doi.org/10.5141/JEFB.2009.32.2.129

Diversity of Moths (Insecta: Lepidoptera) on Bogildo Island, Wando-gun, Jeonnam, Korea  

Park, Marana (Department of Environmental Education, Mokpo National University)
An, Jeong-Seop (Department of Biology, Mokpo National University)
Lee, Jin (Department of Environmental Education, Mokpo National University)
Lim, Jin-Taek (Mokpo Natural History Museum)
Choi, Sei-Woong (Department of Environmental Education, Mokpo National University)
Publication Information
Journal of Ecology and Environment / v.32, no.2, 2009 , pp. 129-135 More about this Journal
Abstract
We investigated the moth diversity on an island of southern sea of Korea. We collected moths at three sites on the island of Bogildo, Wando-gun, Jeonnam using a 22-watt ultraviolet light trap from May to October, 2008, and identified a total of 272 species and 948 individuals in 13 families. Species of Noctuidae was the most abundant, with 107 species and 318 individuals, followed by Geometridae (62 species and 147 individuals) and Pyralidae (53 species and 269 individuals). The graph of the estimated species richness in Chao 1 (432.25$\pm$37.39) did not reach an asymptote, which suggests that more moth species could be identified on the island through further sampling. An arctiid moth, Miltochrista striata, was the most abundant species captured in this study. Monthly changes in moth species richness and abundance formed M-shaped curves, with peaks in early summer (June) and late summer (August). Cluster analysis of seven sites on three islands (Aphaedo Island, Sinan-gun, Oenarodo Island, Goheung-gun and Bogildo Island) divided the sites into two groups. Distances among sites and habitat types may play an important role in determining the similarities of moth faunas among sites.
Keywords
Biodiversity; Inventory; Island; Lepidoptera; Moths;
Citations & Related Records
Times Cited By KSCI : 5  (Citation Analysis)
Times Cited By SCOPUS : 0
연도 인용수 순위
1 Solis MA. 1997. Snout moths: unraveling the taxonomic diversity of a specious group in the neotropics. In Reaka-Kudula ML, Wilson DE, Wilson EO (eds.) Biodiversity II. Joseph Henry Press, Washington D.C., 551pp.
2 SPSS. 2003. SPSS 12.0.1. for windows. SPSS Inc.
3 Southwood TRE, Henderson PA. 2000. Ecological Methods. Blackwell Science Publisher, Oxford
4 Summerville KS, Crist TO. 2002. Effects of timber harvest on forest Lepidoptera: community, guild and species responses. Ecol Apps 12: 820-835   DOI   ScienceOn
5 Summerville KS, Metzler EH, Crist TO. 2001. Diversity of forest Lepidoptera at local and regional scales: how heterogeneous is the fauna? Ann Entomol Soc Am 94: 583-591   DOI   ScienceOn
6 Yela JL, Holyoak M. 1997. Effects of moonlight and meteorological factors on light and bait trap catches of noctuid moths. Environ Entomol 26: 1283-129   DOI
7 Miller SE. 1997. Biogeography of Pacific Insects and Other Terrestrial Invertebrates: A Status Report. Academic Publishing, Amsterdam, pp. 463-475
8 National Institute of Environmental Research. 2002. Natural Environment Survey of Korean Unmanned Islands. Ministry of Environment, Seoul (in Korean)
9 New TR. 2008. Insect conservation on islands: setting the scene and defining the needs. J Insect Conserv 12: 197-204   DOI   ScienceOn
10 Nieminen M. 1996. Extinction risk in moths: effect of host plant characteristics. Oikos 76: 475-484   DOI   ScienceOn
11 Nieminen M, Hanski I. 1998. Metapopulations of moths on islands: a test of two contrasting models. J Anim Ecol 67: 149-160   DOI   ScienceOn
12 Park M, Oh SG, An JS, Kim KI, Choi SW. 2007. Biodiversity of Lepidopteran insects of Mt. Seungdal-san, Muan, Jeonnam, Korea. Korean J Environ Biol 25: 42-55
13 Rabinowitz D, Cairns S, Dillon T. 1986. Seven forms of rarity and their frequency in the British Isles, In Soule ME (ed.) Conservation Biology: The Science of Scarcity and Diversity. Sinauer, Sunderland, MA. pp. 182-204
14 Seaby RH, Henderson PD. 2006. Species Diversity and Richness Version 4. Pisces Conservation Ltd. Lymington
15 Raimondo S, Liebhold AM, Strazanac JS, Butler I. 2004. Population synchrony within and among Lepidoptera species in relation to weather, phylogeny and larval phenology. Ecol Entomol 29: 96-105   DOI   ScienceOn
16 Samways MJ. 2005. Insect Conservation Biology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
17 Scobie MJ. 1992. The Lepidoptera. Form and Function and Diversity. The Natural History Museum, London
18 Gaston KT, Blackburn T, Loder N. 1995. Which species are described first? The case of North American butterflies. Biodivers Conserv 4: 119-127   DOI
19 Holloway JD. 1984. The larger moths of Gunung Mulu National Park; a preliminary assessment of their distribution, ecology, and potential as environment indicators. Sarawak Mus J 30: 149-190
20 Kim CY, Lee JS, Oh KI, Jang SK, Park JK. 2000. Community ecological study on the Quercus acuta forests in Bogildo-Island. Jour Korean For Soc 89: 618-629
21 Kitching RL, Orr AG, Thaib L, Mitchell H, Hopkins MS, Graham AW. 2000. Moth assemblages as indicators of environmental quality of Australian rain forest. J Appl Ecol 37: 284-297   DOI   ScienceOn
22 Korea Meterological Administration. 2007. http://www.kma.go.kr
23 Korea National Statistics Office 2005. Korea Statistical Yearbook 2005. Korea National Statistics Office, Daejeon
24 Kotze DJ. 2008. The occurrence and distribution of carabid beetles (Carabidae) on islands in the Baltic Sea: A review. J Insect Conserv 12: 265-276   DOI   ScienceOn
25 McCune B, Mefford MJ. 1999. PC-ORD. Multivariate Analysis of Ecological Data, Version 5.12. MjM Software Design Gleneden Beach
26 Lim JT, Kim SY, Kim BW, Choi SW. 2007. A fannistic study of moths (Insecta, Lepidoptera) on Is. Aphae-do, Sinan-gun, Jeollanam-do, Korea. Korean J Environ Biol 25: 178-189
27 MacArthur RH, Wilson EO. 1967. The Theory of Island Biogeography. Princeton University Press, Princeton
28 Magurran AE. 2004. Measuring Ecological Diversity. Blackwell Publishing Oxford, 256pp
29 Abang F, Karrnin C. 2005. Diversity of macromoths (Lepidoptera: Heterocera) in the Poring Hill Dipterocarp Forest, Sabah, Borneo. J Asia-Pacific Entomol 8: 69-79   DOI
30 An JS, Park M, Kang ES, Choi SW. 2008. Moth (Insecta: Lepidoptera) biodiversity on Island Oenarodo, Goheung-gun, Jeounam. Korean J Environ Biol 26: 192-202
31 Beck J, Linsenmair KE. 2006. Feasibility of light-trapping in community research on moths: Attraction radius of light, completeness of samples, nightly flight times and seasonality of Southeast-Asian hawkmoths (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae). J Res Lepid 39: 18-37
32 Choi SW, Park M, Chang YR. 2007. Population changes of moths (Insescta: Lepidoptera) from Mt. Wolchul National Park, Jeollanam-do, Korea. J Ecol Field Biol 30: 245-250   DOI   ScienceOn
33 Choi SW. 2008. Effects of weather factors on the abundance and diversity of moths in a temperate deciduous mixed forest of Korea. Zool Sci 25:53-58   DOI   ScienceOn
34 Choi SW, An JS. 2008. Small-scale dynamics of moths in spring from a coniferous forest of Southern Korea. J Ecol Field Biol 31: 83-87   DOI   ScienceOn
35 Colwell RK. 2006. Estimates: Statistical estimation of species richness and shared species from samples. Version 8.0. User's guide and application published at: http://purl.oclc.org/estimates
36 Choi SW, Na SD. 2005. Diversity and faunal changes of the macrolepidoptera in Mt. Duryunsan and its neighboring area, Jeonnam, Korea. Korean J Ecol 28: 79-83
37 Dennis RLH, Dapporto L, Shreeve TG, John E, Coutsis JG, Kudrna O, Saarinen K, Ryrholm N, Williams WR. 2008. Butterflies of European islands: the implications of the geography and ecology of rarity and endemicity for conservation. J Insect Conserv 12: 205-236   DOI   ScienceOn