4.2 Article

First Come, First Serve: Sit and Wait Behavior in Dung Beetles at the Source of Primate Dung

Journal

NEOTROPICAL ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 6, Pages 641-645

Publisher

ENTOMOLOGICAL SOC BRASIL
DOI: 10.1590/S1519-566X2008000600003

Keywords

Competition; resource partitioning; phoresy; niche specialization

Categories

Funding

  1. Amazon Conservation Association
  2. San Francisco State University

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Dung beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae) compete intensively for dung resources, and most species forage in the understory. Here, we describe the unique behavior of one dung beetle species, Canthon aff. quadriguttatus (Olivier), associated with two species of monkeys from Peru. We observed this beetle species on the genital and anal regions of the brown titi monkey, Callicebus brunneus (Wagner), and subsequently falling with dung as the monkeys defecated. The same association was also observed with the bald-faced saki monkey, Pithecia irrorata irrorata (Gray). Using the sit and wait at the source behavior, C. quadriguttus may arrive first at the dung resource, possibly out-competing other dung beetle species. This paper is the first report of this behavior for C. aff. quadriguttatus on the brown titi monkey and bald-faced saki monkey from southeastern, Amazonian Peru. We discuss this behavior in the context of competition and resource partitioning, and also speculate as to why C. aff. quadriguttatus has been found on both monkey species.

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