TY - JOUR
T1 - Use of habitat resources by scarab dung beetles in an African savanna
AU - Carpaneto, Giuseppe Maria
AU - Mazziotta, Adriano
AU - Ieradi, Michele
PY - 2010/12
Y1 - 2010/12
N2 - In the Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda, we compared the scarab beetle assemblages in the dung of three wild ungulates (African buffalo, a ruminant foregut fermenter; hippopotamus, nonruminant foregut fermenter; and warthog, nonruminant hindgut fermenter). Dung was collected from two sandy-clay soils with different percentage of coarse sand. We aimed at investigating habitat resource selection by dung beetle species within a savanna natural contest with abundant and diverse food availability. Analyses were performed to detect differences for dung beetle assemblages in abundance, diversity, functional groups. Species richness in the three dung types and in the two soil types was similar. However, warthog dung and sandy-rich soil appeared the preferred habitat resources, in terms of abundance and biomass, while hippopotamus dung hosted the lowest values for these parameters. The analysis of functional groups revealed that slow-burying tunnellers held the major role, both in terms of abundance and biomass, and were mainly found in warthog dung.
AB - In the Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda, we compared the scarab beetle assemblages in the dung of three wild ungulates (African buffalo, a ruminant foregut fermenter; hippopotamus, nonruminant foregut fermenter; and warthog, nonruminant hindgut fermenter). Dung was collected from two sandy-clay soils with different percentage of coarse sand. We aimed at investigating habitat resource selection by dung beetle species within a savanna natural contest with abundant and diverse food availability. Analyses were performed to detect differences for dung beetle assemblages in abundance, diversity, functional groups. Species richness in the three dung types and in the two soil types was similar. However, warthog dung and sandy-rich soil appeared the preferred habitat resources, in terms of abundance and biomass, while hippopotamus dung hosted the lowest values for these parameters. The analysis of functional groups revealed that slow-burying tunnellers held the major role, both in terms of abundance and biomass, and were mainly found in warthog dung.
KW - Community ecology
KW - competition
KW - functional groups
KW - savanna grasslands
KW - soil ecology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79251506687&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1603/EN09249
DO - 10.1603/EN09249
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 22182540
AN - SCOPUS:79251506687
VL - 39
SP - 1756
EP - 1764
JO - Environmental Entomology
JF - Environmental Entomology
SN - 0046-225X
IS - 6
ER -