Morphological correlates of flightlessness in southern African Scarabaeinae (Coleoptera : Scarabaeidae): testing a condition of the water-conservation hypothesis

Citation
Sl. Chown et al., Morphological correlates of flightlessness in southern African Scarabaeinae (Coleoptera : Scarabaeidae): testing a condition of the water-conservation hypothesis, CAN J ZOOL, 76(6), 1998, pp. 1123-1133
Citations number
61
Categorie Soggetti
Animal Sciences
Journal title
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE ZOOLOGIE
ISSN journal
00084301 → ACNP
Volume
76
Issue
6
Year of publication
1998
Pages
1123 - 1133
Database
ISI
SICI code
0008-4301(199806)76:6<1123:MCOFIS>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
Flightlessness in desert beetles is thought to have evolved either as a res ponse to decreased environmental heterogeneity or directly to reduce water loss. The water-conservation hypothesis rests on three conditions: that spi racular transpiration is greater than cuticular transpiration; that cuticul ar transpiration rates are lower in desert species; and that changes in bod y form associated with flightlessness lead to an overall reduction in water loss rates. The extreme form of the morphological-convergence condition su ggests that this change in body shape should be most pronounced in desert-d welling taxa. The morphological-convergence condition was examined using a morphometric analysis of body shape in flying and nonflying dung beetle spe cies from two southern African tribes occurring in arid and mesic habitats. Although the Canthonini have a more rounded body than the Scarabaeini, fli ghtless species in both tribes have a more rounded body than the flying one s, except at the smallest body sizes. This rounding is more pronounced in f lightless, desert-dwelling Scarabaeini than in flightless species from more mesic habitats. All three conditions required by the water-conservation hy pothesis are met in various beetle taxa, but the hypothesis and its conditi ons have yet to be tested on a single, monophyletic taxon.