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Diet shifts by adult flightless dung beetles Circellium bacchus, revealed using DNA metabarcoding, reflect complex life histories

Authors :
Marietjie Landman
Aurélie Bonin
Delphine Rioux
Pierre Taberlet
Eric Coissac
Graham I. H. Kerley
Frédéric Boyer
Gentile Francesco Ficetola
Source :
Oecologia. 188:107-115
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2018.

Abstract

Life history changes may change resource use. Such shifts are not well understood in the dung beetles, despite recognised differences in larval and adult feeding ability. We use the flightless dung beetle Circellium bacchus to explore such shifts, identifying dung sources of adults using DNA metabarcoding, and comparing these with published accounts of larval dung sources. C. bacchus is traditionally considered to specialise on the dung of large herbivores for both larval and adult feeding. We successfully extracted mammal DNA from 151 adult C. bacchus fecal samples, representing 16 mammal species (ranging from elephants to small rodents), many of which are hitherto undescribed in the diet. Adult C. bacchus showed clear dung source preferences, especially for large herbivores inhabiting dense-cover vegetation. Our approach also confirmed the presence of cryptic taxa in the study area, and we propose that this may be used for biodiversity survey and monitoring purposes. Murid rodent feces were the most commonly fed-upon dung source (77.5%) for adult C. bacchus, differing markedly from the large and megaherbivore dung sources used for larval rearing. These findings support the hypothesis of life history-specific shifts in resource use in dung beetles, and reveal a hitherto unsuspected, but ecologically important, role of these dung beetles in consuming rodent feces. The differences in feeding abilities of the larval and adult life history stages have profound consequences for their resource use and foraging strategies, and hence the ecological role of dung beetles. This principle and its ecological consequences should be explored in other scarabaeids.

Details

ISSN :
14321939 and 00298549
Volume :
188
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Oecologia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....178c3dea08501b7e1f51debc05e77ab1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-018-4203-6