Sl. Chown et He. Steenkamp, BODY-SIZE AND ABUNDANCE IN A DUNG BEETLE ASSEMBLAGE - OPTIMAL MASS AND THE ROLE OF TRANSIENTS, African entomology, 4(2), 1996, pp. 203-212
It has been argued that the strength of the relationship between body
size and abundance in local assemblages can be predicted from both the
number of species included in a study and the extent of their size ra
nge; that transient species do not alter the statistics of this relati
onship; and that the optimal or modal size for a given assemblage can
be predicted from a model using the constants and exponents of the all
ometric relationships between body mass and resource acquisition, and
body mass and resource conversion to offspring. Data on the body size
and abundances of scarabaeine dung beetles from an arid, southern Afri
can savanna habitat, sampled over a 16-month period, and on the scalin
g of metabolic rate and population growth in insects, were used to exa
mine these hypotheses. Coefficients of determination for the abundance
:body size relationship were within the range expected from the sample
size and size range of the assemblage when transient species were exc
luded. When transients were included the fit was poorer. Transient spe
cies had a lower abundance than the resident species, but no differenc
e in body size between the two groups was found. The mode of the speci
es-body size frequency distribution was not predicted by the model whe
n the required parameter values were obtained from the relationship be
tween exact rates of increase (rm) and body mass (resource acquisition
), and metabolic rate and body mass.