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Layers of nocturnal insect migrants at high-altitude: the influence of atmospheric conditions on their formation
Authors:Curtis R Wood  Suzanne J Clark  Janet F Barlow  Jason W Chapman
Institution:Department of Meteorology, University of Reading, Earley Gate, Reading RG6 6BB; , Biomathematics and Bioinformatics Department, Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Hertfordshire AL5 2JQ; and Plant and Invertebrate Ecology Department, Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Hertfordshire AL5 2JQ, U.K.
Abstract:
  • 1 Radar studies of nocturnal insect migration have often found that the migrants tend to form well‐defined horizontal layers at a particular altitude.
  • 2 In previous short‐term studies, nocturnal layers were usually observed to occur at the same altitude as certain meteorological features, most notably at the altitudes of temperature inversion tops or nocturnal wind jets.
  • 3 Statistical analyses are presented of 4 years of data that compared the presence, sharpness and duration of nocturnal layer profiles, observed using continuously‐operating entomological radar, with meteorological variables at typical layer altitudes over the U.K.
  • 4 Analysis of these large datasets demonstrated that temperature was the foremost meteorological factor that was persistently associated with the presence and formation of longer‐lasting and sharper layers of migrating insects over southern U.K.
Keywords:Differential advection  entomological radar  insect layering  nocturnal boundary layer  temperature inversion
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