Abstract

Resource quality is a key driver of species abundance and community structure. Carrion is unique among resources due to its high nutritional quality, rapidly changing nature, and the diverse community of organisms it supports. Yet the role resource quality plays in driving variation in abundance patterns of carrion-associated species remains poorly studied. Here we investigate how species abundances change with a measure of resource change, and interpret these findings to determine how species differ in their association with carrion that changes in quality over time. We conducted field succession experiments using pigs and humans over two winters and one summer. We quantified the effect of total body score, an objective measure of resource change, on adult insect abundance using generalised additive models. For each species, phases of increasing abundance likely indicated attraction to a high-quality resource, and length of abundance maxima indicated optimal oviposition and feeding time. Some species such as the beetle Necrobia rufipes had a rapid spike in abundance, suggesting a narrow window of opportunity for carrion resource exploitation, while species like the wasp Nasonia vitripennis had a gradual change in abundance, indicating a wide window of resource exploitation. Different abundance patterns were also observed between species occurring on pigs and humans, suggesting cadaver type is an important aspect of resource quality. Our findings show that species abundances, unlike species occurrences, can reveal additional detail about species exploitation of carrion and provide information about how resource quality may drive competition and variation in insect community succession.

Highlights

  • Resource quality is a key driver of species abundance and diversity, often having a direct influence on competition and predation within ecological communities (Lucas et al 2009; Marcarelli et al 2011; Ochoa-Hueso et al 2019)

  • For species in the family Calliphoridae, generalised additive models (GAMs) results showed that most species were significantly associated with total body score (TBS) on humans, except for the Calliphora species group

  • Our study revealed how adult abundance patterns on carrion can provide insight into how species respond to carrion resource quality

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Summary

Introduction

Resource quality is a key driver of species abundance and diversity, often having a direct influence on competition and predation within ecological communities (Lucas et al 2009; Marcarelli et al 2011; Ochoa-Hueso et al 2019). Carrion is able to support a wide range of species including vertebrate apex and meso-scavengers, and an enormous diversity of invertebrates and microorganisms, all coexisting on a shared resource and collectively forming the ‘necrobiome’ (Benbow et al 2019). Both interspecific and intraspecific competition for resources on carrion is intense due to the high number of species exploiting the remains (Charabidze et al 2021). Carrion-dependent species are generally highly specialised and adapted to locating decomposing remains and determining when carrion resource quality is optimal for feeding or ovipositing behaviour (Evans et al 2020)

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