Regional insect inventories require long time, extensive spatial sampling and good will.
Understanding how faunistic knowledge develops is of paramount importance to correctly evaluate completeness of insect inventories and to plan future research at regional scale, yet this is an unexplored issue. Aim of this paper was to investigate the processes that lead to a complete species invent...
Main Author: | Simone Fattorini |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
2013-01-01
|
Series: | PLoS ONE |
Online Access: | http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3632580?pdf=render |
Similar Items
-
Insects and the city: what island biogeography tells us about insect conservation in urban areas
by: S. Fattorini
Published: (2016-02-01) -
Sampling strategies for estimating forest cover from remote sensing-based two-stage inventories
by: Piermaria Corona, et al.
Published: (2015-06-01) -
Inventories - What are they good for?
by: Torbjørn Ekrem
Published: (2012-11-01) -
Biogeography of tenebrionid beetles (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) in the circum-Sicilian islands (Italy, Sicily): Multiple biogeographical patterns require multiple explanations
by: Simone FATTORINI
Published: (2011-10-01) -
A Few Good Reasons Why Species-Area Relationships Do Not Work for Parasites
by: Giovanni Strona, et al.
Published: (2014-01-01)