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Density-dependent ecosystem service delivery under shifting temperatures by dung beetles
- Source :
- Gotcha, N, Cuthbert, R N, Machekano, H & Nyamukondiwa, C 2022, ' Density-dependent ecosystem service delivery under shifting temperatures by dung beetles ', Science of the Total Environment, vol. 807, no. Pt 1, 150575 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.150575
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- Elsevier, 2022.
-
Abstract
- Highlights: • Temperature, dung mass and beetle density affected dung utilisation services. • Dung utilisation increased significantly with temperature and density. • Largest Khepher prodigiosus exhibited highest dung utilisation among species. • Emergent effects suggest species respond differently to warming and beetle density. • Ecosystem services provision requires surveillance under global climate change. Abstract: Increases in the frequency and magnitude of suboptimal temperatures as a result of climate change are subjecting insects to unprecedented stresses. This may negatively affect their fitness and the efficiency of their ecosystem service provision. Dung beetles are ecosystem service providers: through feeding on and burying dung, they facilitate nutrient recycling, secondary seed dispersal, parasite control, soil bioturbation and dung decomposition. As such, prediction of how dung beetles respond to multiple anthropogenic environmental changes is critical for the conservation of ecosystem services. Here, we quantified ecosystem services via dung utilisation and dung ball production in three telecoprid species: Allogymnopleurus indigaceous, Scarabaeus zambezianus and Khepher prodigiosus. We examined ecosystem service efficiency factorially under different beetle densities towards different dung masses and under three temperature treatments (21 °C, 28 °C and 35 °C). Khepher prodigiosus, exhibited greatest dung utilisation efficiency overall across dung masses, compared to both S. zambezianus and A. indigaceous. Dung removal was exhibited under all the tested temperatures by all tested species, and therefore the sub-optimal temperatures employed here did not fully inhibit ecosystem service delivery. However, emergent effects among temperatures, beetle species and beetle density further affected removal efficiency: S. zambezianus and A. indigaceous utilisation increased with both warming and beetle density, whereas K. prodigiosus performance was less temperature- and density-dependent. Beetles also tended to exhibit positive density-dependence as dung supply increased. The numbers of dung balls produced differed across species, and increased with temperature and densities, with S. zambezianus producing significantly most balls overall. Our study provides novel evidence for differential density-dependent ecosystem service delivery among species across stressful temperature regimes and emergent effects for dung mass utilisation. This information is essential for biodiversity-ecosystem-function and is critical for the conservation of functionally efficacious species, with implications for natural capital conservation policy in rapidly changing environments.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
Ecological services
Nutrient cycle
Environmental Engineering
Seed dispersal
Climate change
Changing environments
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Ecosystem services
Functional responses
Feces
Seed Dispersal
Environmental Chemistry
Animals
Waste Management and Disposal
Scarabaeus
Ecosystem
biology
Ecology
Dung removal
Temperature
Biodiversity
15. Life on land
biology.organism_classification
Pollution
Coleoptera
010602 entomology
Coprophagic species
13. Climate action
Density dependent
Environmental science
Natural capital
Bioturbation
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Gotcha, N, Cuthbert, R N, Machekano, H & Nyamukondiwa, C 2022, ' Density-dependent ecosystem service delivery under shifting temperatures by dung beetles ', Science of the Total Environment, vol. 807, no. Pt 1, 150575 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.150575
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....80b5f273af8167883324278c6d59dc07