BURYING BEETLES (COLEOPTERA, SILPHIDAE) OF THE APOSTLE ISLANDS, WISCONSIN - SPECIES-DIVERSITY, POPULATION-DENSITY AND BODY-SIZE

Citation
St. Trumbo et S. Thomas, BURYING BEETLES (COLEOPTERA, SILPHIDAE) OF THE APOSTLE ISLANDS, WISCONSIN - SPECIES-DIVERSITY, POPULATION-DENSITY AND BODY-SIZE, Great Lakes entomologist, 31(2), 1998, pp. 85-95
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00900222
Volume
31
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
85 - 95
Database
ISI
SICI code
0090-0222(1998)31:2<85:BB(SOT>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
Over 2400 burying beetles, representing six species (Nicrophorus defod iens, N. sayi, N. orbicollis, N, tomentosus, N. vespilloides, and N. p ustulatus), were trapped from 27 June to 4 August, 1996 at nine study sites (3 small islands, 3 large islands, and 3 mainland locations) cen tered around the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore in northern Wiscon sin. Species diversity was greatest on the mainland and least on the s mallest islands (< 600 ha). Nicrophorus defodiens, the smallest of the six species, was marginally overrepresented on the smallest islands. We hypothesize that this occurred because N. defodiens can maintain a larger population for a given resource base than its larger congeners. Estimates of population density for N. defodiens were made on the two smallest islands (Raspberry and Devils) and ranged from 16-24/ha. On the small and isolated Devils Island, N. defodiens had significantly g reater pronotal width compared to conspecifics at each of the other ei ght sites. We hypothesize that the larger body size at this site which is dominated by N. defodiens may be selected because of the greater f requency of intraspecific encounters.