Ecosphere
(Apr 2017)
Design for ground beetle abundance and diversity sampling within the National Ecological Observatory Network
David Hoekman,
Katherine E. LeVan,
Cara Gibson,
George E. Ball,
Robert A. Browne,
Robert L. Davidson,
Terry L. Erwin,
C. Barry Knisley,
James R. LaBonte,
Jonathan Lundgren,
David R. Maddison,
Wendy Moore,
Jari Niemelä,
Karen A. Ober,
David L. Pearson,
John R. Spence,
Kipling Will,
Timothy Work
Affiliations
David Hoekman
The National Ecological Observatory Network 1685 38th Street Boulder Colorado 80301 USA
Katherine E. LeVan
The National Ecological Observatory Network 1685 38th Street Boulder Colorado 80301 USA
Cara Gibson
Department of Entomology, University of Arizona Tucson Arizona 85721 USA
George E. Ball
Department of Entomology, University of Arizona Tucson Arizona 85721 USA
Robert A. Browne
Wake Forest University 243 Winston Hall, Box 7325 Reynolda Station Winston‐Salem North Carolina 27109 USA
Robert L. Davidson
Carnegie Museum of Natural History 4400 Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 15213 USA
Terry L. Erwin
Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History 10th and Constitution NW Washington D.C. 20560 USA
C. Barry Knisley
Randolph‐Macon College 2500 Rivermont Avenue Lynchburg Virginia 24503 USA
James R. LaBonte
Plant Division, Insect Pest Prevention & Management Program Oregon Department of Agriculture 635 Capitol Street, NE Salem Oregon 97301 USA
Jonathan Lundgren
Ecdysis Foundation 46958 188th Street Estelline South Dakota 57234 USA
David R. Maddison
Department of Integrative Biology Oregon State University 3029 Cordley Hall Corvallis Oregon 97331 USA
Wendy Moore
Department of Entomology University of Arizona 1140 E. South Campus Drive Tucson Arizona 85721 USA
Jari Niemelä
Department of Environmental Sciences University of Helsinki P.O. Box 65, Viikinkaari 1 Helsinki FI‐00014 Finland
Karen A. Ober
College of the Holy Cross 1 College Street Worcester Massachusetts 01610 USA
David L. Pearson
School of Life Sciences Arizona State University 427 E. Tyler Mall Tempe Arizona 85287 USA
John R. Spence
Department of Entomology, University of Arizona Tucson Arizona 85721 USA
Kipling Will
Essig Museum of Entomology University of California–Berkeley Berkeley California 94720 USA
Timothy Work
Université du Québec à Montréal C.P. 8888, Succursale Centreville Montreal Quebec H3P 3P8 Canada
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1744
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8,
no. 4
pp.
n/a
– n/a
Abstract
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Abstract The National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON) will monitor ground beetle populations across a network of broadly distributed sites because beetles are prevalent in food webs, are sensitive to abiotic factors, and have an established role as indicator species of habitat and climatic shifts. We describe the design of ground beetle population sampling in the context of NEON's long‐term, continental‐scale monitoring program, emphasizing the sampling design, priorities, and collection methods. Freely available NEON ground beetle data and associated field and laboratory samples will increase scientific understanding of how biological communities are responding to land‐use and climate change.
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