Abstract

The expanded use of macrocyclic lactones (ML) to treat endo- and ectoparasites in cattle in tropical regions, can reduce dung beetle populations, and thus interrupt the dung removal process in cattle pasture ecosystems. During the reproductive period (the rainy season) of two functional groups of dung beetles (paracoprid and telocoprid Scarabaeinae), we compared dung removal amount in ranches where ML are and are not used in Yucatan, Mexico, through exclusion traps baited with 500 g of ML-free cow dung. On each ranch, two transects (separated by 500 m) with six traps each, were set up for 24 hours. After this time, all the dung remnants in each trap were obtained and weighed in order to record the dung removal. Results showed that dung removal amounts were similar in ranches with and without ML use. Dung beetles removed 40.1 % of all cow dung weighed. Paracoprids removed 87.46 % and telocoprids 12.54 % of all the dung that was removed. Our results indicated that the ecological function of dung beetles in the pastures studied, does not seem to be affected by the ML use, and that paracoprid species removed most of the dung. For both types of ranch, further studies that take into account the population dynamics and movement of the most important dung beetle species in the region are required, coupled with laboratory studies evaluating the effect of ML on their reproductive success. This could give some light on the effect of ML on the ecological function of this important insect group in the sustainability of cattle production systems.

Highlights

  • In natural environments, Scarabaeinae species compete for dung and have developed different strategies to obtain this resource for

  • Endocoprid beetles feed directly on the dung and do not relocate the food, and so are less important in the dung removal process in tropical regions, in terms of the amount of dung removed (Halffter & Edmonds, 1982). Both paracoprid and telocoprid dung beetles actively participate in cattle dung recycling, favoring the productivity of pastures (Nichols et al, 2008), but their assemblages are threatened by the macrocyclic lactones (ML) used to treat endo- and ectoparasites in cattle (Floate, 2011)

  • The intensive use of ML to treat parasites in cattle can lead to drastic reductions in Scarabaeinae population abundance, especially if this type of endectocide is used during the beetle reproduction period, when eggs and larvae are exposed to the chemical compound (Errouissi & Lumaret, 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

Scarabaeinae species compete for dung and have developed different strategies to obtain this resource for Both paracoprid and telocoprid dung beetles actively participate in cattle dung recycling, favoring the productivity of pastures (Nichols et al, 2008), but their assemblages are threatened by the macrocyclic lactones (ML) used to treat endo- and ectoparasites in cattle (Floate, 2011). Dung removal was compared between both types of ranches at the beginning, in the middle and at the end of the rainy season, when dung beetle richness and abundance were the highest in the region (Basto-Estrella et al, 2012; Reyes-Novelo, Delfín-González, & Morón-Ríos, 2007). We hypothesize that tunneler beetles should remove more dung than telocoprid beetles at sites level, and that the maximum dung removal is expected to occur in the middle of the rainy season in accordance with the abundance of these beetles reported by Basto-Estrella et al (2012)

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