Oikos 89, 564-572 (2000)
Ecological characteristics of rare species in communities
of tropical insect herbivores: pondering the mystery of
singletons.
Vojtech Novotny and Yves Basset
Abstract
The host specificity, temporal distribution, body size,
taxonomic composition and feeding guild of rare species were
studied in the communities of herbivorous insects in New Guinea.
Leaf-chewing and sap-sucking insects (Orthoptera, Phasmatodea,
Coleoptera, Lepidoptera and Hemiptera-Auchenorrhyncha) were
sampled from 30 species of trees and shrubs (15 spp. of Ficus,
Moraceae, 6 spp. of Macaranga and 9 species of other
Euphorbiaceae) in a lowland rain forest. Feeding trials were
performed with all leaf-chewers in order to exclude transient
species. Overall, the sampling produced 80,062 individuals of
1,050 species. The species accumulation curve did not attain an
asymptote, despite 950 person-days of sampling. Rare species,
defined as those found as single individuals, remained numerous
even in large samples and after the exclusion of transient,
non-feeding species. There was no difference among plant species
in the proportion of rare species in their herbivore communities,
which was, on average, 45%. Likewise, various herbivore guilds
and taxa had all very similar proportion of rare and common
species. There was also no difference between rare and common
species in their host specificity. Both highly specialised
species and generalists, feeding on numerous plants, contributed
to the singleton records on particular plant species.
Predominantly, a species was rare on a particular host whilst
more common on other, often related, host species, or relatively
rare on numerous other host plants, so that its aggregate population
was high. Both cases are an example of the "mass
effect", since it is probable that such rare species were
dependent on a constant influx of immigrants from the other host
plants. These other plants were found particularly often among
congeneric plants, less so among confamilial plants from
different genera and least frequently among plants from different
families. There were also 278 very rare species, found as one
individual on a single plant species only. Their host specificity
could not be assessed; they might have been either very rare
specialists, or species feeding also on other plants, those that
were not studied. The former possibility is unlikely since
monophagous species, collected as singletons at the present
sampling effort, would have existed at an extremely low
population density, less than 1 individual per 10 ha of the
forest.