University of Maryland DRUM  
University of Maryland Digital Repository at the University of Maryland

DRUM >
College of Chemical & Life Sciences >
Entomology >
Entomology Research Works >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1903/7110

Title: Regressions of length and width to predict arthropod biomass in the Hawaiian Islands
Authors: Gruner, Daniel
Type: Article
Keywords: biomass
regression analysis
body length
body width
Hawaii
morphometrics
Arthropoda
Metrosideros polymorpha
Issue Date: 2003
Publisher: Pacific Science
Citation: Gruner, D. S. 2003. Regressions of length and width to predict arthropod biomass in the Hawaiian Islands. Pacific Science 57:325-336.
Abstract: Biologists in many fields use published regression equations to predict biomass from simple linear body measurements. Power functions are used with arthropods, facilitating biomass estimation of a sample when destructive techniques are not feasible. Resulting predictive coefficients vary widely depending on region and taxa. There are no published biomass regressions for oceanic island fauna, despite the widely accepted conclusion that their arthropod assemblages are unusual in composition. I present a suite of general and taxonomically and morphologically restricted regression equations developed for arthropods in the Hawaiian Islands. General regression equations were highly significant when only length was used to predict biomass, but fits were usually improved by including body width. In regressing restricted sets of taxa, the addition of width did little to improve the fit of the functions. Thus, the choice of regression equations involves a trade-off in taxonomic resolution: precise biomass estimates will come either from (1) low taxonomic resolution measured for both length and width, or (2) high taxonomic resolution measured only for body length. These equations have a high predictive capacity for a broad range of arthropod taxa common in the Hawaiian Islands and, in the absence of locally developed equations, the arthropods of other oceanic islands.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1903/7110
Appears in Collections:Entomology Research Works

Files in This Item:

File Description SizeFormatNo. of Downloads
Gruner2003.pdf119.44 kBAdobe PDF155View/Open

All items in DRUM are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved.

 

DRUM is brought to you by the University of Maryland Libraries
University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742-7011 (301)314-1328.
Please send us your comments. -
All Contents