Chowdhury Shawan, Fuller Richard A, Dingle Hugh, Chapman Jason W, Zalucki Myron P
School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, Saint Lucia, QLD, 4072, Australia.
Department of Entomology and Nematology, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, University of California, Davis, CA, 95616, USA.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2021 Aug;96(4):1462-1483. doi: 10.1111/brv.12714. Epub 2021 Mar 29.
Insect populations including butterflies are declining worldwide, and they are becoming an urgent conservation priority in many regions. Understanding which butterfly species migrate is critical to planning for their conservation, because management actions for migrants need to be coordinated across time and space. Yet, while migration appears to be widespread among butterflies, its prevalence, as well as its taxonomic and geographic distribution are poorly understood. The study of insect migration is hampered by their small size and the difficulty of tracking individuals over long distances. Here we review the literature on migration in butterflies, one of the best-known insect groups. We find that nearly 600 butterfly species show evidence of migratory movements. Indeed, the rate of 'discovery' of migratory movements in butterflies suggests that many more species might in fact be migratory. Butterfly migration occurs across all families, in tropical as well as temperate taxa; Nymphalidae has more migratory species than any other family (275 species), and Pieridae has the highest proportion of migrants (13%; 133 species). Some 13 lines of evidence have been used to ascribe migration status in the literature, but only a single line of evidence is available for 92% of the migratory species identified, with four or more lines of evidence available for only 10 species - all from the Pieridae and Nymphalidae. Migratory butterflies occur worldwide, although the geographic distribution of migration in butterflies is poorly resolved, with most data so far coming from Europe, USA, and Australia. Migration is much more widespread in butterflies than previously realised - extending far beyond the well-known examples of the monarch Danaus plexippus and the painted lady Vanessa cardui - and actions to conserve butterflies and insects in general must account for the spatial dependencies introduced by migratory movements.
包括蝴蝶在内的昆虫种群在全球范围内正在减少,在许多地区,它们正成为亟待保护的重点对象。了解哪些蝴蝶物种会迁徙对于制定其保护计划至关重要,因为针对迁徙蝴蝶的管理行动需要在时间和空间上进行协调。然而,尽管迁徙现象在蝴蝶中似乎很普遍,但人们对其普遍性以及分类学和地理分布却知之甚少。昆虫迁徙的研究受到其体型小以及远距离追踪个体的困难所阻碍。在此,我们回顾了关于蝴蝶(最知名的昆虫类群之一)迁徙的文献。我们发现近600种蝴蝶有迁徙活动的证据。事实上,蝴蝶迁徙活动“被发现”的速度表明,实际上可能还有更多物种是迁徙性的。蝴蝶迁徙在所有科中都有发生,包括热带和温带类群;蛱蝶科的迁徙物种比其他任何科都多(275种),粉蝶科的迁徙物种比例最高(13%;133种)。在文献中,约有13条证据被用于确定迁徙状态,但在已确定的92%的迁徙物种中,仅有一条证据可用,只有10个物种有四条或更多证据可用——均来自粉蝶科和蛱蝶科。迁徙性蝴蝶遍布全球,尽管蝴蝶迁徙的地理分布仍未明确,目前大多数数据来自欧洲、美国和澳大利亚。蝴蝶的迁徙比之前意识到的要广泛得多——远远超出了广为人知的黑脉金斑蝶和小红蛱蝶的例子——总体而言,保护蝴蝶和昆虫的行动必须考虑到迁徙活动所带来的空间依赖性。