Northern Wisconsin bogs provide a natural experiment on butterfly population occurrence in a naturally highly fragmented vegetation type, which may provide insight on conserving butterflies in anthropogenically fragmented and degraded landscapes. We surveyed butterflies in bogs (about as unaffected by humans as possible, but naturally occurring over <1% of northern Wisconsin) primarily during 2002-2009, with additional observations from 1986 to 2001. Different bog types had different bog-specialist butterfly faunas, but bog butterfly abundance also differed in similar vegetations among subregions. Some small isolated bogs held very high densities of specialist butterflies. Summer but not spring specialists frequented adjacent lowland roadsides and utilized a variety of non-native as well as native nectar sources. Paleo-entomology indicates that insects don't evolve out of trouble; instead they move out of trouble. Given the low dispersal apparent today for species restricted to bogs, "move" might be better understood as "hunkering" within their vegetation as it expands and shrinks and moves around the landscape. Although bogs appeared to have more intact specialist butterfly faunas than tallgrass prairies (99.9% destroyed by human activities), bog butterflies do not live in average sites even in a relatively natural landscape. Just as bog butterflies are "sunk and dunked" in isolation, specialist butterflies elsewhere may have been left "high and dry" naturally, or are now due to human activities. Numerous studies have demonstrated that presence and abundance of specialist butterflies increase with increasing size and connectedness of habitat patches. But with long-term consistent vegetation, populations with high abundances in small isolated sites and with low numbers thinly occurring in large sites can be secure, as shown by bog butterflies. © 2010 The Author(s).
CITATION STYLE
Swengel, A. B., & Swengel, S. R. (2011). High and dry or sunk and dunked: Lessons for tallgrass prairies from quaking bogs. Journal of Insect Conservation, 15(1), 165–178. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10841-010-9335-x
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