Vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore

In tropical rain forests where resources are present at different spatial scales, niche partitioning could affect biodiversity. For instance, insects inhabiting the arboreal strata often differ drastically from those in the ground strata. In this study, we investigated the vertical distribution of d...

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Main Authors: Abdul Rahman, Ita Liana, Yap, Sean, Goh, Thary Gazi, Toh, Kai Xin, Yee, Qian Qi Hillary, Puniamoorthy, Nalini
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Published: Wiley 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/28494/
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spelling my.um.eprints.284942022-08-11T06:24:53Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/28494/ Vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore Abdul Rahman, Ita Liana Yap, Sean Goh, Thary Gazi Toh, Kai Xin Yee, Qian Qi Hillary Puniamoorthy, Nalini Q Science (General) In tropical rain forests where resources are present at different spatial scales, niche partitioning could affect biodiversity. For instance, insects inhabiting the arboreal strata often differ drastically from those in the ground strata. In this study, we investigated the vertical distribution of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore by comparing their biodiversity from both ground and canopy traps. In total, we sampled 2242 individuals from four genera. Species composition significantly differed between canopy and ground traps, with Onthophagus cf. crassicollis, Onthophagus cf. deliensis, Onthophagus cf. leusermontis, and Onthophagus cf. babirussa contributing most differences. We report the presence of Onthophagus. cf. deliensis-an abundant, widespread arboreal specialist. Species richness and diversity were significantly lower in canopy traps, indicative of ephemeral dung present. When comparing Shannon diversity differences between stratum, temperature and humidity did not have significant effects. Morphological analyses suggested that arboreal dung beetles are smaller with greater wing loading, exposed eye ratio and leg size, which improve flight, vision, and dung manipulation. This study is a first step toward documenting vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore; detecting morphological differences between ground and arboreal specialists, that are likely adaptations to divergent niches. Wiley 2021-11 Article PeerReviewed Abdul Rahman, Ita Liana and Yap, Sean and Goh, Thary Gazi and Toh, Kai Xin and Yee, Qian Qi Hillary and Puniamoorthy, Nalini (2021) Vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore. Biotropica, 53 (6). pp. 1522-1534. ISSN 0006-3606, DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/btp.13000 <https://doi.org/10.1111/btp.13000>. 10.1111/btp.13000
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
Abdul Rahman, Ita Liana
Yap, Sean
Goh, Thary Gazi
Toh, Kai Xin
Yee, Qian Qi Hillary
Puniamoorthy, Nalini
Vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore
description In tropical rain forests where resources are present at different spatial scales, niche partitioning could affect biodiversity. For instance, insects inhabiting the arboreal strata often differ drastically from those in the ground strata. In this study, we investigated the vertical distribution of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore by comparing their biodiversity from both ground and canopy traps. In total, we sampled 2242 individuals from four genera. Species composition significantly differed between canopy and ground traps, with Onthophagus cf. crassicollis, Onthophagus cf. deliensis, Onthophagus cf. leusermontis, and Onthophagus cf. babirussa contributing most differences. We report the presence of Onthophagus. cf. deliensis-an abundant, widespread arboreal specialist. Species richness and diversity were significantly lower in canopy traps, indicative of ephemeral dung present. When comparing Shannon diversity differences between stratum, temperature and humidity did not have significant effects. Morphological analyses suggested that arboreal dung beetles are smaller with greater wing loading, exposed eye ratio and leg size, which improve flight, vision, and dung manipulation. This study is a first step toward documenting vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore; detecting morphological differences between ground and arboreal specialists, that are likely adaptations to divergent niches.
format Article
author Abdul Rahman, Ita Liana
Yap, Sean
Goh, Thary Gazi
Toh, Kai Xin
Yee, Qian Qi Hillary
Puniamoorthy, Nalini
author_facet Abdul Rahman, Ita Liana
Yap, Sean
Goh, Thary Gazi
Toh, Kai Xin
Yee, Qian Qi Hillary
Puniamoorthy, Nalini
author_sort Abdul Rahman, Ita Liana
title Vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore
title_short Vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore
title_full Vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore
title_fullStr Vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of Singapore
title_sort vertical stratification of dung beetles in young secondary forests of singapore
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/28494/
_version_ 1744649119467569152
score 13.153044