1. Dung beetles are increasingly being used as a focal taxon in biodiversity and conservation studies. One of the alleged advantages of these insects is that sampling conducted in a few days can yield accurate data. 2. Dung beetles were collected twice, within a week, in a tropical dry forest in Mexico. The abundance of one species, Onthophagus landolti, increased 16 times in one of the habitats, over a period of a few days. Consequently, conclusions regarding differences between both habitats differed greatly depending on which sampling period was considered. 3. Short-term temporal variability in the abundance of dung beetles, particularly if spatially asymmetric, must carefully be considered when designing sampling protocols for this group of insects in dry tropical forests.
DOI
10.1111/j.1752-4598.2008.00013.x
Publication Year
2008
Publication Site
Insect Conservation and Diversity
Journal Volume
1
Page Numbers
120–124
Family
Scarabaeidae
Species 1 Genus
Onthophagus
General topic
Ecology
Specific topic
community structure
Abstract Note