A nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020
Global environmental changes may cause dramatic insect declines but over century-long time series of certain species’ records are rarely available for scientific research. The Menetries’ Tiger Moth (Arctia menetriesii) appears to be the most enigmatic example among boreal insects. Although it occurs...
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Language: | English |
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Nature Publishing Group
2022
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10138/342685 |
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ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/342685 |
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openpolar |
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Open Polar |
collection |
HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository |
op_collection_id |
ftunivhelsihelda |
language |
English |
topic |
1181 Ecology evolutionary biology Borearctia-menetriesii eversmann Climate-change Insecta lepidoptera Erebidae arctiinae Declines Ecoregions Butterflies Noctuidae Impacts Worlds |
spellingShingle |
1181 Ecology evolutionary biology Borearctia-menetriesii eversmann Climate-change Insecta lepidoptera Erebidae arctiinae Declines Ecoregions Butterflies Noctuidae Impacts Worlds Bolotov, Ivan N. Gofarov, Mikhail Yu. Koshkin, Evgeny S. Gorbach, Vyacheslav V. Bakhaev, Yury I. Berlov, Oleg E. Gordeev, Sergey Yu. Kolosova, Yulia S. Kondakov, Alexander V. Korshunov, Alexey V. Potapov, Grigory S. Sinev, Sergey Yu. Sleptsov, Spiridon S. Spitsyn, Vitaly M. Strelnikov, Evgeny G. Timchenko, Andrey V. Haverinen, Risto Nupponen, Kari Saarenmaa, Hannu A nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020 |
topic_facet |
1181 Ecology evolutionary biology Borearctia-menetriesii eversmann Climate-change Insecta lepidoptera Erebidae arctiinae Declines Ecoregions Butterflies Noctuidae Impacts Worlds |
description |
Global environmental changes may cause dramatic insect declines but over century-long time series of certain species’ records are rarely available for scientific research. The Menetries’ Tiger Moth (Arctia menetriesii) appears to be the most enigmatic example among boreal insects. Although it occurs throughout the entire Eurasian taiga biome, it is so rare that less than 100 specimens were recorded since its original description in 1846. Here, we present the database, which contains nearly all available information on the species’ records collected from 1840s to 2020. The data on A. menetriesii records (N = 78) through geographic regions, environments, and different timeframes are compiled and unified. The database may serve as the basis for a wide array of future research such as the distribution modeling and predictions of range shifts under climate changes. It represents a unique example of a more than century-long dataset of distributional, ecological, and phenological data designed for an exceptionally rare but widespread boreal insect, which primarily occurs in hard-to-reach, uninhabited areas of Eurasia. Peer reviewed |
author2 |
Department of Forest Sciences |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Bolotov, Ivan N. Gofarov, Mikhail Yu. Koshkin, Evgeny S. Gorbach, Vyacheslav V. Bakhaev, Yury I. Berlov, Oleg E. Gordeev, Sergey Yu. Kolosova, Yulia S. Kondakov, Alexander V. Korshunov, Alexey V. Potapov, Grigory S. Sinev, Sergey Yu. Sleptsov, Spiridon S. Spitsyn, Vitaly M. Strelnikov, Evgeny G. Timchenko, Andrey V. Haverinen, Risto Nupponen, Kari Saarenmaa, Hannu |
author_facet |
Bolotov, Ivan N. Gofarov, Mikhail Yu. Koshkin, Evgeny S. Gorbach, Vyacheslav V. Bakhaev, Yury I. Berlov, Oleg E. Gordeev, Sergey Yu. Kolosova, Yulia S. Kondakov, Alexander V. Korshunov, Alexey V. Potapov, Grigory S. Sinev, Sergey Yu. Sleptsov, Spiridon S. Spitsyn, Vitaly M. Strelnikov, Evgeny G. Timchenko, Andrey V. Haverinen, Risto Nupponen, Kari Saarenmaa, Hannu |
author_sort |
Bolotov, Ivan N. |
title |
A nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020 |
title_short |
A nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020 |
title_full |
A nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020 |
title_fullStr |
A nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020 |
title_full_unstemmed |
A nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020 |
title_sort |
nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020 |
publisher |
Nature Publishing Group |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/342685 |
genre |
Arctic taiga |
genre_facet |
Arctic taiga |
op_relation |
10.1038/s41597-022-01230-8 The Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation partly supported this work (project No. FUUW-2022?0056 to I.N.B., M.Y.G., and A.V.K., project No. 121021500060-4 to E.S.K., project No. 121030900138-8 to S.Y.G., project No. 075-15-2021-1069 to S.Y.S., and project No. FUUW-2022-0039 to Y.S.K and V.M.S.). The Research and Educational Center ?Russian Arctic: new materials, technologies and research methods? supported A.V.K.?The Northern Arctic Federal University covered an open access fee for this article. We are grateful to Matti Ahola (Reisj?rvi, Finland), Pekka Alestalo (Helsinki, Finland), Evgeny A. Beljaev (Vladivostok, Russia), Vladimir V. Dubatolov (Novosibirsk, Russia), Alexander I. Ermakov (Yekaterinburg, Russia), Pavel Yu. Gorbunov (Yekaterinburg, Russia), Dmitry V. Goshko (Moscow, Russia), Axel Hausmann (Munich, Germany), Yasunori Kishida (Tokyo, Japan), Vladimir S. Kononenko (Vladivostok, Russia), Oleg V. Korsun and Nadezhda O. Korsun (Chita, Russia), Pasi Sihvonen (Kirkkonummi, Finland), Kimmo Silvonen (Espoo, Finland), Pavel S. Sitnikov (Tyumen, Russia), and Marko T?htinen (Espoo, Finland) for their generous help during this study. The Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation partly supported this work (project No. FUUW-2022–0056 to I.N.B., M.Y.G., and A.V.K., project No. 121021500060-4 to E.S.K., project No. 121030900138-8 to S.Y.G., project No. 075-15-2021-1069 to S.Y.S., and project No. FUUW-2022-0039 to Y.S.K and V.M.S.). The Research and Educational Center “Russian Arctic: new materials, technologies and research methods” supported A.V.K. The Northern Arctic Federal University covered an open access fee for this article. We are grateful to Matti Ahola (Reisjärvi, Finland), Pekka Alestalo (Helsinki, Finland), Evgeny A. Beljaev (Vladivostok, Russia), Vladimir V. Dubatolov (Novosibirsk, Russia), Alexander I. Ermakov (Yekaterinburg, Russia), Pavel Yu. Gorbunov (Yekaterinburg, Russia), Dmitry V. Goshko (Moscow, Russia), Axel Hausmann (Munich, Germany), Yasunori Kishida (Tokyo, Japan), Vladimir S. Kononenko (Vladivostok, Russia), Oleg V. Korsun and Nadezhda O. Korsun (Chita, Russia), Pasi Sihvonen (Kirkkonummi, Finland), Kimmo Silvonen (Espoo, Finland), Pavel S. Sitnikov (Tyumen, Russia), and Marko Tähtinen (Espoo, Finland) for their generous help during this study. Bolotov , I N , Gofarov , M Y , Koshkin , E S , Gorbach , V V , Bakhaev , Y I , Berlov , O E , Gordeev , S Y , Kolosova , Y S , Kondakov , A V , Korshunov , A V , Potapov , G S , Sinev , S Y , Sleptsov , S S , Spitsyn , V M , Strelnikov , E G , Timchenko , A V , Haverinen , R , Nupponen , K & Saarenmaa , H 2022 , ' A nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020 ' , Scientific data , vol. 9 , 107 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-022-01230-8 ORCID: /0000-0003-3716-575X/work/111518588 ORCID: /0000-0002-0094-906X/work/142010506 35338150 85127299295 2a3a07b2-ff60-45df-acef-3be30733ef86 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/342685 000780362700005 |
op_rights |
cc_by openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
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Scientific Data |
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ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/342685 2024-01-07T09:40:45+01:00 A nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020 Bolotov, Ivan N. Gofarov, Mikhail Yu. Koshkin, Evgeny S. Gorbach, Vyacheslav V. Bakhaev, Yury I. Berlov, Oleg E. Gordeev, Sergey Yu. Kolosova, Yulia S. Kondakov, Alexander V. Korshunov, Alexey V. Potapov, Grigory S. Sinev, Sergey Yu. Sleptsov, Spiridon S. Spitsyn, Vitaly M. Strelnikov, Evgeny G. Timchenko, Andrey V. Haverinen, Risto Nupponen, Kari Saarenmaa, Hannu Department of Forest Sciences 2022-04-12T06:02:03Z 10 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/342685 eng eng Nature Publishing Group 10.1038/s41597-022-01230-8 The Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation partly supported this work (project No. FUUW-2022?0056 to I.N.B., M.Y.G., and A.V.K., project No. 121021500060-4 to E.S.K., project No. 121030900138-8 to S.Y.G., project No. 075-15-2021-1069 to S.Y.S., and project No. FUUW-2022-0039 to Y.S.K and V.M.S.). The Research and Educational Center ?Russian Arctic: new materials, technologies and research methods? supported A.V.K.?The Northern Arctic Federal University covered an open access fee for this article. We are grateful to Matti Ahola (Reisj?rvi, Finland), Pekka Alestalo (Helsinki, Finland), Evgeny A. Beljaev (Vladivostok, Russia), Vladimir V. Dubatolov (Novosibirsk, Russia), Alexander I. Ermakov (Yekaterinburg, Russia), Pavel Yu. Gorbunov (Yekaterinburg, Russia), Dmitry V. Goshko (Moscow, Russia), Axel Hausmann (Munich, Germany), Yasunori Kishida (Tokyo, Japan), Vladimir S. Kononenko (Vladivostok, Russia), Oleg V. Korsun and Nadezhda O. Korsun (Chita, Russia), Pasi Sihvonen (Kirkkonummi, Finland), Kimmo Silvonen (Espoo, Finland), Pavel S. Sitnikov (Tyumen, Russia), and Marko T?htinen (Espoo, Finland) for their generous help during this study. The Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation partly supported this work (project No. FUUW-2022–0056 to I.N.B., M.Y.G., and A.V.K., project No. 121021500060-4 to E.S.K., project No. 121030900138-8 to S.Y.G., project No. 075-15-2021-1069 to S.Y.S., and project No. FUUW-2022-0039 to Y.S.K and V.M.S.). The Research and Educational Center “Russian Arctic: new materials, technologies and research methods” supported A.V.K. The Northern Arctic Federal University covered an open access fee for this article. We are grateful to Matti Ahola (Reisjärvi, Finland), Pekka Alestalo (Helsinki, Finland), Evgeny A. Beljaev (Vladivostok, Russia), Vladimir V. Dubatolov (Novosibirsk, Russia), Alexander I. Ermakov (Yekaterinburg, Russia), Pavel Yu. Gorbunov (Yekaterinburg, Russia), Dmitry V. Goshko (Moscow, Russia), Axel Hausmann (Munich, Germany), Yasunori Kishida (Tokyo, Japan), Vladimir S. Kononenko (Vladivostok, Russia), Oleg V. Korsun and Nadezhda O. Korsun (Chita, Russia), Pasi Sihvonen (Kirkkonummi, Finland), Kimmo Silvonen (Espoo, Finland), Pavel S. Sitnikov (Tyumen, Russia), and Marko Tähtinen (Espoo, Finland) for their generous help during this study. Bolotov , I N , Gofarov , M Y , Koshkin , E S , Gorbach , V V , Bakhaev , Y I , Berlov , O E , Gordeev , S Y , Kolosova , Y S , Kondakov , A V , Korshunov , A V , Potapov , G S , Sinev , S Y , Sleptsov , S S , Spitsyn , V M , Strelnikov , E G , Timchenko , A V , Haverinen , R , Nupponen , K & Saarenmaa , H 2022 , ' A nearly complete database on the records and ecology of the rarest boreal tiger moth from 1840s to 2020 ' , Scientific data , vol. 9 , 107 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-022-01230-8 ORCID: /0000-0003-3716-575X/work/111518588 ORCID: /0000-0002-0094-906X/work/142010506 35338150 85127299295 2a3a07b2-ff60-45df-acef-3be30733ef86 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/342685 000780362700005 cc_by openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess 1181 Ecology evolutionary biology Borearctia-menetriesii eversmann Climate-change Insecta lepidoptera Erebidae arctiinae Declines Ecoregions Butterflies Noctuidae Impacts Worlds Article publishedVersion 2022 ftunivhelsihelda 2023-12-14T00:07:31Z Global environmental changes may cause dramatic insect declines but over century-long time series of certain species’ records are rarely available for scientific research. The Menetries’ Tiger Moth (Arctia menetriesii) appears to be the most enigmatic example among boreal insects. Although it occurs throughout the entire Eurasian taiga biome, it is so rare that less than 100 specimens were recorded since its original description in 1846. Here, we present the database, which contains nearly all available information on the species’ records collected from 1840s to 2020. The data on A. menetriesii records (N = 78) through geographic regions, environments, and different timeframes are compiled and unified. The database may serve as the basis for a wide array of future research such as the distribution modeling and predictions of range shifts under climate changes. It represents a unique example of a more than century-long dataset of distributional, ecological, and phenological data designed for an exceptionally rare but widespread boreal insect, which primarily occurs in hard-to-reach, uninhabited areas of Eurasia. Peer reviewed Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic taiga HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository Scientific Data 9 1 |