Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-5nwft Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-31T03:54:04.363Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Diversity of moths in forest plantations and natural forests in Sabah

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

V. K. Chey
Affiliation:
Forest Research Centre, PO Box 1407, 90715 Sandakan, Sabah, Malaysia
J. D. Holloway
Affiliation:
International Institute of Entomology, 56 Queen's Gate, London SW7 5JR, UK
M. R. Speight
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK

Abstract

The diversity of macromoths in the various fast-growing exotic tree plantations and natural secondary forest in Brumas, Sabah, Malaysia was assessed by means of an annual cycle of light-trap samples. The moth diversity in the forest plantations, viz. Acacia mangium, Gmelina arborea, Paraserianthes (=Albizia) falcataria, Pinus caribaea, and in particular Eucalyptus deglupta, was unexpectedly high. Eucalyptus deglupta showed moth diversity as high as that in the natural secondary forest, a finding attributed to the fact that the E. deglupta plantation had a very diverse understorey both in terms of plant species (secondary regrowth species) and architecture, and thus supported a more diverse moth fauna. Subsidiary samples showed that primary natural forest in the neighbouring Danum Valley does not show higher moth diversity compared to the disturbed forest habitats in Brumas, though moth diversity at Danum is lower than that recorded in other Bornean primary forests. The value of plantation forests for conservation of invertebrate diversity is discussed, together with the implications for plantation management strategy.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ashton, P.S. (1989) Species richness in tropical forests. pp. 239251in Holm-Nielsen, L.B., Nielsen, I.C., & Balslev, H. (Eds) Tropical forests: botanical dynamics, speciation and diversity. London, Academic Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barlow, H.S. (1982) An introduction to the moths of South East Asia. Kuala Lumpur, Malayan Nature Society.Google Scholar
Barlow, H.S. & Woiwod, I.P. (1989) Moth diversity of a tropical forest in Peninsular Malaysia. Journal of Tropical Ecology 5, 3750.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, N.M. (Ed.) (1990) The last rain forests. London, Mitchell Beazley.Google Scholar
Davies, A.G. (1981) Wildlife survey conducted in Sabah Softwoods Sdn. Bhd. Plantation. Unpublished report. Sabah Forest Department, Sandakan.Google Scholar
Davis, A.J. (1993) The ecology and behaviour of rainforest dung beetles in Northern Borneo. PhD thesis. University of Leeds.Google Scholar
Duff, A.B., Hall, R.A. & Marsh, C.W. (1984) A survey of wildlife in and around a commercial tree plantation in Sabah. Malaysian Forester 47, 197213.Google Scholar
Fisher, R.A., Corbet, A.S. & Williams, C.B. (1943) The relation between the number of species and the number of individuals in a random sample of an animal population. Journal of Animal Ecology 12, 4258.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayek, L-A.C. (1994) Analysis of amphibian biodiversity data. pp. 207269in Heyer, W.R.et al., (Eds) Measuring and monitoring biological diversity, standard methods for amphibians. Washington and London, Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1976) Moths of Borneo with special reference to Mount Kinabalu. Kuala Lumpur, Malayan Nature Society.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1979) A survey of the Lepidoptera, biogeography and ecology of New Caledonia. Series Entomologica 15. The Hague, W. Junk.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1983a) The moths of Borneo: family Notodontidae. Malayan Nature Journal 37, 1107.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1983b) Insect surveys - an approach to environmental monitoring. Atti XII Congresso Nazionale Italiano d'Entomologica, Roma, 1980, 230261.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1984) The larger moths of the Gunung Mulu National Park; a preliminary assessment of their distribution, ecology and potential as environmental indicators. in Jermy, A.C. & Kavanagh, K.P. (Eds) Gunung Mulu National Park, Sarawak, Part II. Sarawak Museum Journal 30, 149190, Special Issue 2.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1985a) The moths of Borneo: family Noctuidae: Subfamilies Euteliinae, Stictopterinae, Plusiinae, Pantheinae. Malayan Nature Journal 38, 157317.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1985b) Moths as indicator organisms for categorizing rain forest and monitoring changes and regeneration processes. pp. 235242in Chadwick, A.C. & Sutton, S.L. (Eds) Tropical rain forest: the Leeds Symposium, Special Publication, Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1986) The moths of Borneo: key to families; families Cossidae, Metarbelidae, Ratardidae, Dudgeoneidae, Epipyropidae and Limacodidae. Malayan Nature Journal 40, 1166.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1987) The moths of Borneo: superfamily Bombycoidea: families Lasiocampidae, Eupterotidae, Bombycidae, Brahmaeidae, Saturniidae, Sphingidae. Kuala Lumpur, Southdene.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1988) The moths of Borneo: family Arctiidae, subfamilies Syntominae, Euchromiinae, Arctiinae; Noctuidae misplaced in Arctiidae (Camptoloma, Aganainae). Kuala Lumpur, Southdene.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1989) The moths of Borneo: family Noctuidae, trifine subfamilies: Noctuinae, Heliothinae, Hadeninae, Acronictinae, Amphipyrinae, Agaristinae. Malayan Nature Journal 42, 57226.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. (1993) The moths of Borneo: family Geometridae. Subfamily Ennominae. Malayan Nature Journal 47, 1309.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. & Barlow, H.S. (1992) Potential for loss of biodiversity in Malaysia, illustrated by the moth fauna. pp. 293311in Aziz, A., Kadir, S.A. & Barlow, H.S. (Eds) Pest management and the environment in 2000. CAB International & Agricultural Institute of Malaysia.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D. & Stork, N.E. (1991) The dimensions of biodiversity: the use of invertebrates as indicators of man's impact. pp. 3762in Hawksworth, D.L. (Ed.) The biodiversity of microorganisms and invertebrates: its role in sustainable agriculture. CAB International, Wallingford.Google Scholar
Holloway, J.D., Kirk-Spriggs, A.H. & Chey, V.K. (1992) The response of some rain forest insect groups to logging and conversion to plantation. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B 335, 425436.Google Scholar
Innes, J.L. & Whittaker, R.J. (1993) Relationships between the crown condition of Sitka and Norway spruce and the environment in Great Britain: an exploratory analysis. Journal of Applied Ecology 30, 341360.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jardine, N. & Sibson, R. (1968) The construction of hierarchic and non-hierarchic classifications. Computing Journal 11, 177184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kempton, R.A. & Taylor, L.R. (1976) Models and statistics for species diversity. Nature 262, 818820.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mabberley, D.J. (1983) Tropical rain forest ecology. Blackie.Google Scholar
Magurran, A.M. (1988) Ecological diversity and its measurement. London, Croom Helm.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Majer, J.D. & Recher, H.F. (1988) Invertebrate communities on Western Australian eucalypts: A comparison of branch clipping and chemical knockdown procedures. Australian Journal of Ecology 13, 269278.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morris, P. (1978) Small mammals in the forests of the Gogol Valley, June/July 1977. UNESCO Man & Biosphere Workshop, Madang, Papua New Guinea.Google Scholar
Muirhead-Thomson, R.C. (1991) Trap responses of flying Insects. The influence of trap design on capture efficiency. London, Academic Press.Google Scholar
Paijmans, K. (Ed.) (1976) New Guinea vegetation. CSIRO & ANU Press.Google Scholar
Preston, F.W. (1962) The canonical distribution of commonness and rarity. Ecology 43, 185215, 410–432.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prince, Philip (1988) Down to Earth. London, Collins.Google Scholar
Robinson, G.S. & Tuck, K.R. (1993) Diversity and faunistics of small moths (Microlepidoptera) in Bornean rainforest. Ecological Entomology 18, 385393.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sabah Forest Department (1992) (Untitled) Map of Sabah showing Natural & Plantation Forests.Google Scholar
Sheldon, F.H. (1986) Habitat changes potentially affecting birdlife in Sabah, East Malaysia. Ibis 128, 174175.Google Scholar
Sheldon, F.H. & Kennard, J. (1982) Bird colonization and species richness in Sabah softwoods Albizia falcataria. Paper presented at the 8th Malaysian Forestry Conference,July 1982.Sabah Forest Department,Sandakan.Google Scholar
Southwood, T.R.E., Brown, V.K. & Reader, P.M. (1979) The relationships of plant and insect diversities in succession. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 12, 327348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spellerberg, I.F. (1991) Monitoring ecological change. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Strong, D.R., Lawton, J.H. & Southwood, T.R.E. (1984) Insects on plants. Community patterns and mechanisms. Blackwell.Google Scholar
Stuebing, R.B. & Gasis, J. (1989) A survey of small mammals within a Sabah tree plantation in Malaysia. Journal of Tropical Ecology 5, 203214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, L.R., Kempton, R.A. & Woiwod, I.P. (1976) Diversity statistics and the log-series model. Journal of Animal Ecology 45, 255271.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, C.B. (1939) An analysis of four years' captures of insects in a light-trap. Part I. General survey; sex proportion; phenology; and time of flight. Transactions of the Royal Entomological Society of London 89, 79131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, C.B. (1940) An analysis of four years' captures of insects in a light-trap. Part II. The effect of weather conditions on insect activity; and the estimation and forecasting of change in the insect population. Transactions of the Royal Entomological Society of London 90, 227306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolda, H. (1981) Similarity indices, sample size and diversity. Oecologia 50, 296302.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wolda, H. (1983) Diversity, diversity indices and tropical cockroaches. Oecologia 58, 290298.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wolda, H., Marek, J., Spitzer, K. & Novak, I. (1994) Diversity and variability of Lepidoptera populations in urban Brno, Czech Republic. European Journal of Entomology 91, 213226.Google Scholar