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Insect collecting bias in Arizona with a preliminary checklist of the beetles from the Sand Tank Mountains.

M Andrew JohnstonEvan S WaiteEthan R WrightBrian H ReilyGilma Juanita De LeonAngela Iran EsquivelJacob KerwinMaria SalazarEmiliano SarmientoTommy ThiatmajaSangmi LeeKelsey YuleNico M Franz
Published in: Biodiversity data journal (2023)
The number of occurrence records and collecting events are very unevenly distributed throughout Arizona and do not strongly correlate with the geographic size of areas. Species richness is estimated for regions in Arizona using rarefaction and extrapolation. Digitised records from the disproportionately highly collected areas in Arizona represent at best 70% the total insect diversity within them. We report a total of 141 species of Coleoptera from the Sand Tank Mountains, based on 914 digitised voucher specimens. These specimens add important new records for taxa that were previously unavailable in digitised data and highlight important biogeographic ranges.Possible underlying mechanisms causing bias are discussed and recommendations are made for future targeted collecting of under-sampled regions. Insect species diversity is apparently at best 70% documented for the State of Arizona with many thousands of species not yet recorded. The Chiricahua Mountains are the most densely sampled region of Arizona and likely contain at least 2,000 species not yet vouchered in online data. Preliminary estimates for species richness of Arizona are at least 21,000 and likely much higher. Limitations to analyses are discussed which highlight the strong need for more insect occurrence data.
Keyphrases
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