Nebraska Academy of Sciences
Date of this Version
2002
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The principal plant biomes in Nebraska are briefly reviewed. The relationships of insects, particularly scarab beetles and butterflies, to these biomes are discussed, especially as it relates to their distributions. Human-induced alteration of habitat has significantly influenced the present distributions of both plants and insects relative to their historical distributions at the time of Euro-american colonization of Nebraska in the mid-1800s. Examples of range expansion or contraction are presented for exemplar taxa of scarab beetles and butterflies
Comments
Published in 2002. Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences 28: 29-47; Copyright © 2002 Ratcliffe and Hammond