Journal article
A preliminary assessment of changes in plant-dwelling insects when threatened plants are translocated
ML Moir, PA Vesk, KEC Brennan, L Hughes, DA Keith, MA McCarthy, DJ Coates, S Barrett
Journal of Insect Conservation | Published : 2012
Abstract
Translocation of threatened species is a tool used increasingly to conserve biodiversity, but the suite of co-dependent species that use the threatened taxa as hosts can be overlooked. We investigate the preliminary impact of translocating three threatened plant species on insect species and the integrity of insect assemblages that depend on these plants as their hosts. We compare the insect assemblages between natural populations of the threatened species, related non-threatened plant species growing wild near the threatened plants, and threatened plants translocated to another site approximately 40 km away. We used host breadth models and a coextinction risk protocol to determine which ins..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
Grants from the Australian Research Council (DP0772057) and Australia & Pacific Science Foundation (APSF 07/3) supported this work. We thank P. Luscombe for his enthusiasm in the translocation experiment conducted on his property, and assistance with plant identifications. We gratefully thank B. Hanich, R. Oberprieler, G. S. Taylor, A. Szito, P. J. Gullan, S. Barker and C. A. M. Reid for taxonomic assistance. Finally, two anonymous reviewers and Editor T. Shreeve are thanked for their time and useful suggestions on this paper.