Insect taxonomy is fundamental to global biodiversity research, but few studies have been conducted to track progress in this field using objective criteria. This study reports publishing trends in the taxonomy of four diverse, globally-distributed insect families from 1946 to 2012 to elucidate recent progress and the current status of insect taxonomy. Publications included in the Zoological Record online literature database were analyzed for Cicadellidae (leafhoppers), Miridae (plant bugs), Pyralidae (moths) and Staphylinidae (rove beetles). Data on numbers of new species, article length, species description length, authorship and collaborations, and taxonomic journals were extracted and compiled for each year. The results showed that (1) ...
Museums and funding agencies have invested considerable resources in recent years to digitize inform...
Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies) form one of the four largest animal orders, with published estim...
We evaluated completeness and historical trend of the taxonomic knowledge on the myrmecophilous grou...
Insect taxonomy is fundamental to global biodiversity research, but few studies have been conducted ...
Insect taxonomy is fundamental to global biodiversity research, but few studies have been conducted ...
Fig 1. Time series of newly described species for the families Cicadellidae, Miridae, Pyralidae and ...
Fig 5 (continued on next page). Number of articles published by continent (Europe, North America, So...
Fig 2. Average new species described per article (Cicadellidae, Miridae, Pyralidae and Staphylinidae...
Fig 3. Average page length of new species descriptions (Cicadellidae, Miridae, Pyralidae and Staphyl...
Research disciplines in science have historically developed in silos but are increasingly multidisci...
This study identifies the number of named and described species of three monotrysian, plant-mining l...
Recent studies show that there are more taxonomists describing species in recent decades than before...
Mordellidae (tumbling flower beetles) is a globally distributed family of Coleoptera; it is among th...
Few investigations have been made of the species description trend of scale insects. The present stu...
Australian Faunal Directory data were used to create a new, publicly available dataset, nai50, which...
Museums and funding agencies have invested considerable resources in recent years to digitize inform...
Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies) form one of the four largest animal orders, with published estim...
We evaluated completeness and historical trend of the taxonomic knowledge on the myrmecophilous grou...
Insect taxonomy is fundamental to global biodiversity research, but few studies have been conducted ...
Insect taxonomy is fundamental to global biodiversity research, but few studies have been conducted ...
Fig 1. Time series of newly described species for the families Cicadellidae, Miridae, Pyralidae and ...
Fig 5 (continued on next page). Number of articles published by continent (Europe, North America, So...
Fig 2. Average new species described per article (Cicadellidae, Miridae, Pyralidae and Staphylinidae...
Fig 3. Average page length of new species descriptions (Cicadellidae, Miridae, Pyralidae and Staphyl...
Research disciplines in science have historically developed in silos but are increasingly multidisci...
This study identifies the number of named and described species of three monotrysian, plant-mining l...
Recent studies show that there are more taxonomists describing species in recent decades than before...
Mordellidae (tumbling flower beetles) is a globally distributed family of Coleoptera; it is among th...
Few investigations have been made of the species description trend of scale insects. The present stu...
Australian Faunal Directory data were used to create a new, publicly available dataset, nai50, which...
Museums and funding agencies have invested considerable resources in recent years to digitize inform...
Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies) form one of the four largest animal orders, with published estim...
We evaluated completeness and historical trend of the taxonomic knowledge on the myrmecophilous grou...