Abstract

We described, for the first time, a case of predation of a non-arthropod species by a dung beetle species. Canthon chalybaeus Blanchard, 1843 kills healthy individuals of the terrestrial snail Bulimulus apodemetes (D’Orbigny, 1835) showing an evident pattern of physical aggressiveness in the attacks using the dentate clypeus and the anterior tibiae. The description of this predatory behaviour was complemented with the analysis of the chemical secretions of the pygidial glands of C. chalybaeus, highlighting those main chemical compounds that, due to their potential toxicity, could contribute to death of the snail. We observed a high frequency of predatory interactions reinforcing the idea that predation in dung beetles is not accidental and although it is opportunistic it involves a series of behavioural sophistications that suggest an evolutionary pattern within Deltochilini that should not only be better studied from a behavioural point of view but also phylogenetically.

Highlights

  • Dung beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) feed mainly on vertebrate herbivore dung being the main taxonomic group responsible for the recycling of the nutrients it contains

  • We described a new case of predation by Canthon chalybaeus Blanchard, 1843 (Fig 1), which kills healthy individuals of the terrestrial snail Bulimulus apodemetes (D’Orbigny, 1835), being the first reported case of a dung beetle preying on a non-arthropod species

  • The evident patterns of physical aggressiveness in the attacks and the high frequency of predatory interactions confirm that C. chalybaeus is an efficient predator of B. apodemetes

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Summary

Introduction

Dung beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) feed mainly on vertebrate herbivore dung being the main taxonomic group responsible for the recycling of the nutrients it contains. This condition is optional, being considered the species as copro-necrophagous [1] Among those strict necrophagous species, only few cases of predation of dung beetles on other arthropods have been observed, being the cases of Canthon virens Mannerheim, 1829 and C. dives Harold, 1868, preying on the leafcutter ant Atta laevigata (Smith, 1858), the first and most documented [4,5,6,7,8,9].

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