Preferred nectar sources for the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus plexippus) along the Great Plains migration pathway

IF 2.7 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Ecosphere Pub Date : 2025-02-10 DOI:10.1002/ecs2.70085
Kenneth E. Spaeth Jr., C. Jason Williams, Ray A. Moranz, Christine Taliga, William A. Rutherford, Brenda Simpson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Population declines of the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus plexippus) in North America have largely been attributed to the distribution and condition of species-specific preferred nectar sources. In 2020, the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) listed the monarch butterfly in the US Federal Register as a candidate species under the Endangered Species Act of 1973. The USFWS ranked the availability, quality, and spatial distribution of nectar plants during autumn migration as the fourth most contributing factor to US monarch population declines. During the autumn migration through the Great Plains, monarchs seek nectar plants to accumulate lipid reserves for further migration to and overwintering in Mexico. We applied vegetation and rangeland health data from the US Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service, National Resources Inventory (NRI) to quantify species density and richness of monarch-preferred nectar plants, associated rangeland conditions, and diversity of nectar sources along this autumn migration pathway. We focused specifically on longitudinal gradients W-095-100 and W-100-105 and discrete 5° latitudinal–longitudinal cells within those gradients. The respective NRI dataset spans 8211 rangeland sites sampled between 2009 and 2018. Approximately 84.4% of sites in W-095-100 and 72.5% of sites in W-100-105 contained monarch-preferred nectar plants. Preferred nectar plants made up 7.4% of 2438 identified plant species in W-095-100 and 6.1% of 2371 identified plant species in W-100-105. For W-095-100, preferred nectar plant densities were highest for the 5° cell covering portions of US states Oklahoma and Kansas and lowest for the 5° cell at the US–Mexico border. In W-100-105, preferred nectar plant densities decreased linearly from north to south. Preferred nectar plant densities were greater for 5° cells in W-100-105 (50.5 billion plants) as compared with W-095-100 (44.4 billion plants). Consistent with trends in preferred nectar source density, rangeland conditions assessed by similarity indices and rangeland health protocols were generally lowest for 5° cells spanning the US–Mexico border. The results provide the most comprehensive assessment to date for preferred nectar sources of the monarch butterfly along the Great Plains autumn migration to Mexico and document generally decreasing nectar sources and habitat conditions at southern latitudes in this ecologically important pathway.

Abstract Image

黑脉金斑蝶(Danaus plexippus plexippus)在大平原迁徙路径上的首选花蜜来源
北美黑脉金斑蝶(Danaus plexippus plexippus)种群数量的下降在很大程度上归因于物种特异性首选花蜜来源的分布和条件。2020年,根据1973年《濒危物种法》,美国鱼类和野生动物管理局(USFWS)将帝王蝶列为美国联邦登记册上的候选物种。美国野生动物管理局将秋季迁徙期间花蜜植物的可用性、质量和空间分布列为美国黑脉金斑君主数量下降的第四大因素。在穿越大平原的秋季迁徙中,帝王蝶寻找花蜜植物来积累脂肪储备,以便进一步迁徙到墨西哥并在墨西哥越冬。我们利用美国农业部、自然资源保护局、国家资源清单(NRI)的植被和牧场健康数据,量化了帝王蝶喜欢的花蜜植物的物种密度和丰富度,相关的牧场条件,以及这条秋季迁徙路径上花蜜来源的多样性。我们特别关注了W-095-100和W-100-105的纵向梯度,以及这些梯度内离散的5°经纬度单元。各自的NRI数据集涵盖了2009年至2018年间采样的8211个牧场地点。W-095-100和W-100-105分别有84.4%和72.5%的地点含有帝王蝶偏爱的花蜜植物。W-095-100的2438种植物和W-100-105的2371种植物中,偏爱花蜜植物占7.4%和6.1%。对于W-095-100,覆盖美国俄克拉何马州和堪萨斯州部分地区的5°细胞的首选花蜜植物密度最高,而位于美墨边境的5°细胞的首选花蜜植物密度最低。在W-100-105中,优选花蜜植物密度由北向南呈线性下降。W-100-105(505亿株)5°细胞的首选花蜜植物密度高于W-095-100(444亿株)。与首选花蜜源密度的趋势一致,通过相似性指数和牧场健康协议评估的牧场条件通常在美墨边境的5°细胞中最低。该研究结果提供了迄今为止最全面的关于黑脉金斑蝶沿大平原秋季向墨西哥迁徙的首选花蜜来源的评估,并记录了这条生态重要途径中南纬地区花蜜来源和栖息地条件普遍减少的情况。
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来源期刊
Ecosphere
Ecosphere ECOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
3.70%
发文量
378
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: The scope of Ecosphere is as broad as the science of ecology itself. The journal welcomes submissions from all sub-disciplines of ecological science, as well as interdisciplinary studies relating to ecology. The journal''s goal is to provide a rapid-publication, online-only, open-access alternative to ESA''s other journals, while maintaining the rigorous standards of peer review for which ESA publications are renowned.
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