AI Article Synopsis

  • Butterflies are a key focus for studying biogeographical patterns globally and regionally, with many studies concentrated in well-researched northern regions, leaving tropical areas like India underexplored.
  • The study analyzed 1,379 butterfly species across India's 36 states to understand the relationship between species richness and factors such as geography, climate, and socioeconomics, finding that topographic diversity and the precipitation/temperature ratio are crucial for predicting species richness.
  • Indian butterfly diversity primarily aligns with global biodiversity hotspots, with unique faunas in the Western Himalayas and peninsular savannah states reflecting the region's geographical and climatic uniqueness.

Article Abstract

Butterflies are widely used to analyze biogeographical patterns, both at the global and regional scales. Thus far, most of the latter originated from well-surveyed northern regions, while the species-rich tropical areas lag due to a lack of appropriate data. We used checklists of 1379 butterfly species recorded in 36 federal states of the Republic of India (1) to explore the basic macroecological rules, and (2) to relate species richness and the distribution of endemics and geographic elements to geography, climate, land covers and socioeconomic conditions of the states. The area, land covers diversity and latitude did not affect species richness, whereas topographic diversity and the precipitation/temperature ratio (energy availability) were positive predictors. This is due the geographic and climatic idiosyncrasies of the Indian subcontinent, with its highest species richness in the small, densely forested mountainous northeast that receives summer monsoons. The peninsular effect that decreases the richness towards the tip of subcontinent is counterbalanced by the mountainous forested Western Ghats. Afrotropical elements are associated with savannahs, while Palearctic elements are associated with treeless habitats. The bulk of Indian butterfly richness, and the highest conservation priorities, overlap with global biodiversity hotspots, but the mountainous states of the Western Himalayas and the savannah states of peninsular India host distinctive faunas.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10299651PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects14060549DOI Listing

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