Journal of Animal Ecology (2005) 74: 882-892
Abstract:
1. Previous studies of insect dynamics have detected spatial synchrony in
intraspecific population dynamics up to, but not exceeding, 1000 km. Oddly,
interspecific synchrony has recently been reported at distances well over 1000
km (at continental and circumpolar scales). While the authors implicated
climatic effects as the cause for the apparent largescale interspecific
synchrony, there is no evidence that weather data are synchronized over such
great distances.
2. In the present study, intraspecific circumpolar synchrony in the gypsy moth,
Lymantria dispar (L.), was tested for among 11 regions across three continents
(North America, Europe and Asia). Analyses indicate that most gypsy moth
populations around the world tend to oscillate at periodicities between 8 and 12
years.
3. These oscillations were synchronized at distances up to c. 1200 km within
continents. There was no evidence for intraspecific synchrony of gypsy moth
populations between continents.
4. We suggest that previous reports of interspecific synchrony among insects at
scales much greater than 1000 km may suffer from spurious correlations among
oscillating populations.
Keywords: Insect outbreaks, Lymantria dispar, periodicity, spatial synchrony, wavelet analysis.
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