| Literature DB >> 19537983 |
Thomas K Sabu1, K V Vinod, P J Vineesh.
Abstract
The diversity, guild structure and succession of dung beetles associated with Indian elephant dung is described in a deciduous forest site in Western Ghats, a hot spot of diversity in India. Dung beetles were collected using baited pitfall traps and from exposed dung pats in the forest at intervals of 1, 3, 5, 7, 15 and 21 days. Twenty-one dung beetle species belonging to the 3 major functional guilds were recorded. Abundance of dwellers was high compared to rollers deviating from earlier reports on the high abundance of rollers in the afrotropical regions. Dweller Drepanocerus setosus and tunneler Onthophagus bronzeus were the most abundant species. Dung pats aged 3-5 days attracted the highest abundance of dung beetles. Bray Curtis similarity index indicated low community similarity between different stages of succession. Species richness and abundance of tunnelers increased with dung age and decreasing moisture up to a threshold level, followed by a decrease. Rollers and dwellers did not show any significant relationship with dung moisture content. Further research is needed to estimate the dung beetle community associated with the dung pats of other mega herbivores as well as of elephant dung in other forests of the Western Ghats.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 19537983 PMCID: PMC2990306 DOI: 10.1673/2006_06_17.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Insect Sci ISSN: 1536-2442 Impact factor: 1.857
Figure 1(a) Map of India showing the location of the Western Ghats. (b) The Western Ghats. (c) The study site in the Wayanad region of the Western Ghats.
Diversity, abundance, guild structure and succession of dung beetles associated with Indian elephant dung.
Richness estimators, diversity and dominance indices of the dung beetle species associated with elephant dung.
Figure 2A, B. Randomized species accumulation curves of dung beetles attracted to baited pitfall traps from South Western Ghats deciduous forest at Thirunelly.
Figure 3Relationship between species richness (A) and abundance (B) of dung beetles and moisture plotted against dung age.
Figure 4Succession pattern of dung beetles associated with elephant dung in the South Western Ghats forest at Thirunelly.
Figure 5Dendogram based on hierarchical agglomerative clustering (group-average linking) showing the similarities between the dung beetle assemblages present during different stages of succession.