Male horn lack of allometry may be tied to food relocation behaviour in lifting dung beetles (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae, Eucraniini)
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Abstract:
The small dung beetle tribe Eucraniini includes extremely specialized species that have
been defined as “lifters” according to their food relocation behaviour. They are characterized by the
presence of well-developed expansions on the head and pronotum, which can be included in the
large and varied group of horns, whose presence is usually related to complex reproductive tactics.
In this study, two closely related species, Anomiopsoides cavifrons and A. heteroclyta, were examined
employing traditional and geometric morphometrics to test whether the Eucraniini has
polymorphic males that might exhibit different reproductive tactics, as in the sister tribe Phanaeini,
for which a male trimorphism was demonstrated. If also present in Eucraniini polyphenism could
be considered a plesiomorphy common to the two clades. The inter- and intraspecific shape
variation and object symmetry of the head and the scaling relationships between body size and traits
were evaluated. Marked interspecific and small intraspecific differences in shape variation, high
symmetry, and similar isometric growth patterns were shown in both species. The hypothesis of
male polymorphism in Anomiopsoides was thus rejected. Instead, the results supported the
alternative hypothesis that Eucraniini lacks male polymorphism, perhaps due to functional
constraints affecting the shape of the structures involved in their peculiar food relocating behaviour.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Anomiopsoides, static allometry, symmetry, geometric morphometrics, feeding
behaviour, arid environment, Argentina endemism
Elenco autori:
Claudia Palestrini, Enrico Barbero, Angela Roggero
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