Addressing biodiversity knowledge shortfalls in New World Helicopsychidae (Insecta, Trichoptera): Potential distribution, environmental gradients, and identification of conservation and research priority areas.

IF 2.6 3区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
PLoS ONE Pub Date : 2025-07-28 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0327580
Rafael Pereira, Adolfo Calor
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This study provides an integrative analysis of Helicopsychidae biodiversity in the New World (NW), examining their distribution patterns, environmental gradients, biodiversity hotspots, and biodiversity knowledge shortfalls. We estimated species richness, delineated potential distribution, and identified areas of priority for research/conservation efforts. Our estimates indicate that up to 75% of NW Helicopsychidae species remain undescribed, with a notable Linnean shortfall at the subgenus level: approximately 50% of H. (Cochliopsyche) species and up to 77% of H. (Feropsyche) species are yet to be described. Knowledge of semaphoronts is also limited, with immature stages documented for only 15% of H. (Feropsyche) species and 6% of H. (Cochliopsyche). Distributional records are concentrated in the Brazilian subregion (between 0°-24°S), and most species have a short environmental distribution gradient. Based on currently known, priority conservation areas are in the Antilles and the Tropical Forest. For H. (Feropsyche), priority areas include low-altitude and coastal regions with low-order streams, whereas H. (Cochliopsyche) conservation priorities lie in the large river basins, especially in the Amazon and Atlantic Forests. Future research efforts should focus on H. (Feropsyche) in the Chaco and high-altitude areas of the Atlantic Forest, Cerrado, and Caatinga domains, as well as on H. (Cochliopsyche) across South America's high order river (e.g., Amazon, Orinoco, Paraná, and São Francisco Rivers). Here, highlights recent advances in the taxonomy and distribution cataloguing of NW Helicopsychidae, despite significant progress, marjory of species remain undescribed, emphasizing the need for continued research. Although well-sampled regions like the Antilles, south Central America, Amazon coastal areas, and Central Atlantic Forest Ecological Corridor should be prioritized for conservation, vast areas such as the Amazon lowlands, northeast and southwest Atlantic Forest, and transition areas of Atlantic Forest and Dry Diagonal remain underexplored. To the best of our knowledge, this study represents one of first empirical analysis of environmental gradients for Trichoptera species. It establishes a foundation for understanding biogeographic patterns, environmental gradients, and the identification of biodiversity hotspots and potential distribution areas for Helicopsychidae in the New World. This work will guide future research and conservation efforts for Helicopsychidae and other Trichoptera groups in the region.

解决新世界直升机科生物多样性知识短缺问题:潜在分布、环境梯度以及确定保护和研究重点领域。
本研究综合分析了新世界(NW)直升机科生物多样性,考察了其分布格局、环境梯度、生物多样性热点和生物多样性知识不足。我们估计了物种丰富度,描绘了潜在的分布,并确定了研究/保护工作的优先区域。我们的估计表明,高达75%的西北直升机蝗科物种仍未被描述,在亚属水平上存在显著的林奈不足:大约50%的H. (Cochliopsyche)物种和高达77%的H. (Feropsyche)物种尚未被描述。对信号体的了解也很有限,只有15%的H. (Feropsyche)物种和6%的H. (Cochliopsyche)物种记录了未成熟阶段。分布记录主要集中在巴西亚区(0°-24°S),大多数种具有较短的环境分布梯度。根据目前已知的情况,优先保护区在安的列斯群岛和热带森林。对于H. (Feropsyche)来说,优先保护的区域包括低海拔和低阶溪流的沿海地区,而H. (Cochliopsyche)的保护重点在于大的河流流域,特别是亚马逊和大西洋森林。未来的研究工作应该集中在查科和大西洋森林、塞拉多和Caatinga域的高海拔地区的H. (Feropsyche),以及南美洲高阶河流(如亚马逊河、奥里诺科河、帕拉南河和奥弗朗西斯科河)的H. (Cochliopsyche)。本文重点介绍了西北直升机科的分类和分布编目的最新进展,尽管取得了重大进展,但仍有大部分物种未被描述,强调了继续研究的必要性。虽然像安的列斯群岛、中美洲南部、亚马逊沿海地区和中大西洋森林生态走廊等样本丰富的地区应该优先保护,但亚马逊低地、东北和西南大西洋森林以及大西洋森林和干对角线的过渡地区等广大地区仍未得到充分开发。据我们所知,本研究是首次对毛翅目物种的环境梯度进行实证分析。这为了解直升机科在新大陆的生物地理格局、环境梯度、生物多样性热点和潜在分布区的确定奠定了基础。这项工作将指导今后在该地区对直升机蝇科和其他毛翅目昆虫的研究和保护工作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE 生物-生物学
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
5.40%
发文量
14242
审稿时长
3.7 months
期刊介绍: PLOS ONE is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access, online publication. PLOS ONE welcomes reports on primary research from any scientific discipline. It provides: * Open-access—freely accessible online, authors retain copyright * Fast publication times * Peer review by expert, practicing researchers * Post-publication tools to indicate quality and impact * Community-based dialogue on articles * Worldwide media coverage
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