Coprophagous dung beetles are a numerically and functionally important group. Their obligatory use of mammalian dung has broad ecological implications, including providing economically and epidemiologically relevant ecosystem services. Beetle-mammal ecological networks are critically important in determining the resilience of dung beetle communities and the supply of beetle-mediated ecosystem functions. However, our understanding of dung beetle trophic networks remains incomplete. Here we report on a pilot study to evaluate the effectiveness of DNA-based analyses in identifying the source of dung beetle meals. Using beetles collected from dung piles of known provenance, we hypothesized that molecular analysis of gut content would correctly identify the mammal host, and that beetle body size would increase the odds of successful detection of mammalian DNA. We analyzed 90 specimens belonging to six beetle species. Most samples yielded mtDNA sequences from the expected mammalian species, suggesting that these methods can be an efficient tool for the investigation of dung beetle diet. © 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
DOI
10.3109/24701394.2016.1155120
Publication Year
2017
Publication Site
Mitochondrial DNA Part A: DNA Mapping, Sequencing, and Analysis
Journal Volume
28
Page Numbers
612–615
Family
Scarabaeidae
General topic
Ecology
Methods
Specific topic
genetics
biotic interactions
Abstract Note