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The Swedish Malaise Trap Project: A 15 Year Retrospective on a Countrywide Insect Inventory
Stockholm University, Faculty of Science, Department of Zoology. Station Linné, Färjestaden, Sweden; Swedish Museum of Natural History, Sweden.
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Number of Authors: 52020 (English)In: Biodiversity Data Journal, ISSN 1314-2836, E-ISSN 1314-2828, Vol. 8, article id e47255Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The Swedish Malaise Trap Project (SMTP) is one of the most ambitious insect inventories ever attempted. The project was designed to target poorly known insect groups across a diverse range of habitats in Sweden. The field campaign involved the deployment of 73 Malaise traps at 55 localities across the country for three years (2003-2006). Over the past 15 years, the collected material has been hand sorted by trained technicians into over 300 taxonomic fractions suitable for expert attention. The resulting collection is a tremendous asset for entomologists around the world, especially as we now face a desperate need for baseline data to evaluate phenomena like insect decline and climate change. Here, we describe the history, organisation, methodology and logistics of the SMTP, focusing on the rationale for the decisions taken and the lessons learned along the way. The SMTP represents one of the early instances of community science applied to large-scale inventory work, with a heavy reliance on volunteers in both the field and the laboratory. We give estimates of both staff effort and volunteer effort involved. The project has been funded by the Swedish Taxonomy Initiative; in total, the inventory has cost less than 30 million SEK (approximately 3.1 million USD). Based on a subset of the samples, we characterise the size and taxonomic composition of the SMTP material. Several different extrapolation methods suggest that the material comprises around 20 million specimens in total. The material is dominated by Diptera (75% of the specimens) and Hymenoptera (15% of specimens). Amongst the Diptera, the dominant groups are Chironomidae (37% of specimens), Sciaridae (15%), Phoridae (13%), Cecidomyiidae (9.5%) and Mycetophilidae (9.4%). Within Hymenoptera, the major groups are Ichneumonidae (44% of specimens), Diaprioidea (19%), Braconidae (9.6%), Platygastroidea (8.5%) and Chalcidoidea (7.9%). The taxonomic composition varies with latitude and season. Several Diptera and Hymenoptera groups are more common in non-summer samples (collected from September to April) and in the North, while others show the opposite pattern. About 1% of the total material has been processed and identified by experts so far. This material represents over 4,000 species. One third of these had not been recorded from Sweden before and almost 700 of them are new to science. These results reveal the large amounts of taxonomic work still needed on Palaearctic insect faunas. Based on the SMTP experiences, we discuss aspects of planning and conducting future large-scale insect inventory projects using mainly traditional approaches in relation to more recent approaches that rely on molecular techniques.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2020. Vol. 8, article id e47255
Keywords [en]
All-taxa biodiversity inventory (ATBI), biota, diversity, entomology, inventory, insects, Malaise Trap, community science, citizen science
National Category
Biological Sciences
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:su:diva-179620DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.8.e47255ISI: 000509558200001PubMedID: 32015667OAI: oai:DiVA.org:su-179620DiVA, id: diva2:1415154
Available from: 2020-03-17 Created: 2020-03-17 Last updated: 2024-03-12Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Charting Insect Diversity
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Charting Insect Diversity
2024 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Background: Despite Sweden's rich legacy in entomology, a significant portion of its insect fauna remains poorly studied. Addressing this and other biodiversity knowledge gaps, the Swedish government unveiled the Swedish Taxonomy Initiative (STI) in 2002, with the ambitious goal of documenting and scientifically describing all multicellular species in the country. One of the largest projects funded by STI is the Swedish Malaise Trap Project (SMTP). The SMTP project, the data resulting from it, and the analyses of that data constitute the core of the current thesis.

Methods and Results: The SMTP deployed 73 Malaise traps across 55 diverse habitats from 2003 to 2009, capturing an estimated 20 million insects. The catch has been sorted to over 300 taxonomic fractions suitable for further processing by taxonomic experts. The sorted material has been studied by over 100 taxonomists, identifying 4,000 species in about 1% of the total material. A third of these were previously unrecorded in Sweden, including nearly 700 potentially new to science. The SMTP represents a significant community effort and we describe the history, organization, logistics and methodology of the SMTP project, with a focus on the lessons learned along the way and the optimized workflows that resulted in the end. The SMTP output was used to estimate the species richness and composition of the Swedish insect fauna. This included expert assessments, analysis of new species discovery rates, and statistical extrapolations from abundance and incidence data, including a novel non-parametric estimator. These methods converged on an estimate of 33,000 species, 26% of which were unknown at the inventory’s start, and 15% of which still await discovery. To improve the speed and accuracy of the analysis of Malaise trap samples, we introduced morphotype barcoding, combining manual sorting into morphospecies with individual DNA barcoding of representative specimens. Morphotype barcoding is shown to offer more accurate abundance estimates than metabarcoding. In contrast to metabarcoding, it also provides material that is directly suitable for enhancing barcode reference libraries. At the same time, it is shown to be significantly cheaper and require less consumables than megabarcoding (specimen-level barcoding of all specimens in the sample).

Conclusion: The SMTP exemplifies the successful application of community science to biodiversity research, leveraging volunteer efforts alongside professional expertise, a model that has proven to be effective in gathering extensive biodiversity data. The thesis thus offers valuable insights into planning and executing large-scale biodiversity inventories. The analyses of SMTP data suggest that a significant portion of the diversity remains undiscovered or undocumented within one of Europe's most well-studied insect faunas. The thesis highlights critical taxonomic and ecological biases in our current understanding, evidenced by the predominance of Hymenoptera and Diptera species, and decomposers and parasitoids, among the newly discovered species. These findings are pivotal in reshaping our understanding of global biodiversity and the specific ecological roles of insects. The study also emphasizes the need for a more inclusive taxonomic scope in biodiversity inventories, a challenge heightened by the urgency suggested by recent reports of alarming global declines in insect populations.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Department of Zoology, Stockholm University, 2024. p. 40
Keywords
insect faunas, biological inventories, citizen science, DNA barcoding, morphotype barcoding
National Category
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Research subject
Systematic Zoology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-227394 (URN)978-91-8014-713-2 (ISBN)978-91-8014-714-9 (ISBN)
Public defence
2024-04-26, Vivi Täckholmsalen (Q-salen), NPQ-huset, Svante Arrhenius väg 20, Stockholm, 13:00 (English)
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Supervisors
Available from: 2024-04-03 Created: 2024-03-12 Last updated: 2025-02-07Bibliographically approved

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Hartop, EmilyRonquist, Fredrik

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