04077oam 2200733 450 991071181700332120210115111856.0(CKB)5470000002487915(OCoLC)981530867(EXLCZ)99547000000248791520170405d2016 ua 0engurcn|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierInsect community responses to climate and weather across elevation gradients in the Sagebrush Steppe, eastern Oregon /by David S. Pilliod and Ashley T. RohdeReston, Virginia :U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey,2016.1 online resource (vi, 50 pages) color illustrations, color mapsOpen-file report ;2016-1183"Prepared in cooperation with the Bureau of Land Management under Interagency Agreement L10PG00804 for the project: Forecasting Insect Community Responses to Changes in Land Management and Climate in Upper Basin Sagebrush Steppe."Includes bibliographical references (pages 47-50).Executive summary -- Introduction -- Methods -- Study design and sampling methods -- Section I. assessment of sampling design -- Section II. insect community composition -- Section III. insect phenology -- Management implications and future directions -- References cited.In this study, the U.S. Geological Survey investigated the use of insects as bioindicators of climate change in sagebrush steppe shrublands and grasslands in the Upper Columbia Basin. The research was conducted in the Stinkingwater and Pueblo mountain ranges in eastern Oregon on lands administered by the Bureau of Land Management. We used a "space-for-time" sampling design that related insect communities to climate and weather along elevation gradients. Overall, our interpretation of these patterns is that insect communities respond positively and negatively to weather and local vegetation more than to long-term climate. Given increasing variability in weather and high probability of extreme weather events, insect communities in sagebrush steppe also may experience considerable fluctuations in composition and abundance, as well as phenology. These findings have implications for many ecosystem services, including pollination, decomposition, and food resources for predatory birds and other vertebrates.Sagebrush steppe ecologyOregonInsect populationsOregonInsect-plant relationshipsOregonInsectsClimatic factorsOregonInsectsEffect of altitude onOregonPublic landsOregonManagementSagebrush steppe ecologyfastInsect populationsfastInsect-plant relationshipsfastInsectsEffect of altitude onfastClimatic changesfastPublic landsManagementfastEastern OregonfastSagebrush steppe ecologyInsect populationsInsect-plant relationshipsInsectsClimatic factorsInsectsEffect of altitude onPublic landsManagement.Sagebrush steppe ecology.Insect populations.Insect-plant relationships.InsectsEffect of altitude on.Climatic changes.Public landsManagement.Pilliod David S.1396487Rohde Ashley T.Geological Survey (U.S.),United States.Bureau of Land Management.UDDUDDOCLCQOCLCACOPOCLGPOBOOK9910711817003321Insect community responses to climate and weather across elevation gradients in the Sagebrush Steppe, eastern Oregon3456682UNINA