Zoogeography of the Holarctic species of the Noctuidae (Lepidoptera): impoftance of the Beringian refuge
As a result of published and unpublished revisionary work, literature compilation and expeditions to the Beringian area, 98 species of the Noctuidae are listed as Holarctic and grouped according to their taxonomic and distributional history. Of the 44 species considered to be "naturally" H...
Published in: | Entomologica Fennica |
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Language: | English |
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This journal is published jointly by the Entomological Society of Finland, the Lepidopterological Society of Finland, the Societas Entomologica Helsingforsiensis and the Entomological Club of the Zoological and Botanical Society of Turku.
1991
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Online Access: | https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/83545 https://doi.org/10.33338/ef.83545 |
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fttsvojs:oai:journal.fi:article/83545 2024-10-29T17:45:21+00:00 Zoogeography of the Holarctic species of the Noctuidae (Lepidoptera): impoftance of the Beringian refuge Mikkola, Kauri Lafontaine, Donald Kononenko, Vladimir 1991-09-01 application/pdf https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/83545 https://doi.org/10.33338/ef.83545 eng eng This journal is published jointly by the Entomological Society of Finland, the Lepidopterological Society of Finland, the Societas Entomologica Helsingforsiensis and the Entomological Club of the Zoological and Botanical Society of Turku. https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/83545/42831 https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/83545 doi:10.33338/ef.83545 Copyright (c) 2019 Entomologica Fennica Entomologica Fennica; Vol. 2 No. 3 (1991); 157-173 Entomologica Fennica; Vol 2 Nro 3 (1991); 157-173 2489-4966 0785-8760 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed article 1991 fttsvojs https://doi.org/10.33338/ef.83545 2024-10-08T15:05:45Z As a result of published and unpublished revisionary work, literature compilation and expeditions to the Beringian area, 98 species of the Noctuidae are listed as Holarctic and grouped according to their taxonomic and distributional history. Of the 44 species considered to be "naturally" Holarctic before this sttdy, 27 (61%) are confirmed as Holarctic; 16 species are added on account of range extensions and 29 because of changes in their taxonomic status; 17 taxa are deleted from the Holarctic list. This brings the total of the group to 72 species. Thirteen species are considered to be introduced by man from Europe, a further eight to have been transported by man in the subtropical areas, and five migrant species, three of them of Neotropical origin, may have been assisted by man. The majority of the "naturally" Holarctic species are associated with tundra habitats. The species of dry tundra are frequently endemic to Beringia. In the taiga zone, most Holarctic connections consist of Palaearctic/Nearctic species pairs. The proportion of Holarctic species decreases from 100% in the High Arctic to between 40 and 75% in Beringia and the northern taigazone, and from between 10 and 20% in Newfoundland and Finland to between 2 and 4% in southern Ontario, Central Europe, Spain and Primorye. Excluding the species supposedly introduced or assisted by man, all Holarctic species occur in the wider Beringian area (Pyrrhia exprimens (Wlk.) has been observed only in Kamchatka and Anaplectoides prasina (D. &. S.) near the southern border of the Yukon); 36/72 (50%) of the Holarctic species are circumpolar in distribution. The earlier view about Amphiatlantic distributions in the Lepidoptera is refuted. The origin of the Beringian fauna and the mammoth-steppe idea are discussed. Article in Journal/Newspaper Kamchatka taiga Tundra Beringia Yukon Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online Arctic Yukon Entomologica Fennica 2 3 157 173 |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online |
op_collection_id |
fttsvojs |
language |
English |
description |
As a result of published and unpublished revisionary work, literature compilation and expeditions to the Beringian area, 98 species of the Noctuidae are listed as Holarctic and grouped according to their taxonomic and distributional history. Of the 44 species considered to be "naturally" Holarctic before this sttdy, 27 (61%) are confirmed as Holarctic; 16 species are added on account of range extensions and 29 because of changes in their taxonomic status; 17 taxa are deleted from the Holarctic list. This brings the total of the group to 72 species. Thirteen species are considered to be introduced by man from Europe, a further eight to have been transported by man in the subtropical areas, and five migrant species, three of them of Neotropical origin, may have been assisted by man. The majority of the "naturally" Holarctic species are associated with tundra habitats. The species of dry tundra are frequently endemic to Beringia. In the taiga zone, most Holarctic connections consist of Palaearctic/Nearctic species pairs. The proportion of Holarctic species decreases from 100% in the High Arctic to between 40 and 75% in Beringia and the northern taigazone, and from between 10 and 20% in Newfoundland and Finland to between 2 and 4% in southern Ontario, Central Europe, Spain and Primorye. Excluding the species supposedly introduced or assisted by man, all Holarctic species occur in the wider Beringian area (Pyrrhia exprimens (Wlk.) has been observed only in Kamchatka and Anaplectoides prasina (D. &. S.) near the southern border of the Yukon); 36/72 (50%) of the Holarctic species are circumpolar in distribution. The earlier view about Amphiatlantic distributions in the Lepidoptera is refuted. The origin of the Beringian fauna and the mammoth-steppe idea are discussed. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Mikkola, Kauri Lafontaine, Donald Kononenko, Vladimir |
spellingShingle |
Mikkola, Kauri Lafontaine, Donald Kononenko, Vladimir Zoogeography of the Holarctic species of the Noctuidae (Lepidoptera): impoftance of the Beringian refuge |
author_facet |
Mikkola, Kauri Lafontaine, Donald Kononenko, Vladimir |
author_sort |
Mikkola, Kauri |
title |
Zoogeography of the Holarctic species of the Noctuidae (Lepidoptera): impoftance of the Beringian refuge |
title_short |
Zoogeography of the Holarctic species of the Noctuidae (Lepidoptera): impoftance of the Beringian refuge |
title_full |
Zoogeography of the Holarctic species of the Noctuidae (Lepidoptera): impoftance of the Beringian refuge |
title_fullStr |
Zoogeography of the Holarctic species of the Noctuidae (Lepidoptera): impoftance of the Beringian refuge |
title_full_unstemmed |
Zoogeography of the Holarctic species of the Noctuidae (Lepidoptera): impoftance of the Beringian refuge |
title_sort |
zoogeography of the holarctic species of the noctuidae (lepidoptera): impoftance of the beringian refuge |
publisher |
This journal is published jointly by the Entomological Society of Finland, the Lepidopterological Society of Finland, the Societas Entomologica Helsingforsiensis and the Entomological Club of the Zoological and Botanical Society of Turku. |
publishDate |
1991 |
url |
https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/83545 https://doi.org/10.33338/ef.83545 |
geographic |
Arctic Yukon |
geographic_facet |
Arctic Yukon |
genre |
Kamchatka taiga Tundra Beringia Yukon |
genre_facet |
Kamchatka taiga Tundra Beringia Yukon |
op_source |
Entomologica Fennica; Vol. 2 No. 3 (1991); 157-173 Entomologica Fennica; Vol 2 Nro 3 (1991); 157-173 2489-4966 0785-8760 |
op_relation |
https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/83545/42831 https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/83545 doi:10.33338/ef.83545 |
op_rights |
Copyright (c) 2019 Entomologica Fennica |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.33338/ef.83545 |
container_title |
Entomologica Fennica |
container_volume |
2 |
container_issue |
3 |
container_start_page |
157 |
op_container_end_page |
173 |
_version_ |
1814274604539052032 |