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Five pitfall traps baited with 150–200 g of fresh cattle dung were installed for 24 h at weekly intervals. A total of 991 dung beetles from 11 genera, 31 species and three subfamilies was obtained. The community was dominated by Oniticellus spinipes individuals by 32.3%. Ten species appeared only once during the collection period and species composition and dominance changed throughout the period. The overall pattern we detected in the organization of the dung beetle community is that the species richness, abundance and diversity rise in September and the 2nd week of October. The dung beetle community was found to be affected by season.  相似文献   
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Abstract. 1. Oniticellus egregius Klug constructs brood ovoids of dung in the soil immediately under the edge of animal droppings. Each successive brood ovoid is enveloped within a soil shell. After completion of brood construction, loose earth is cleared from around the broods to produce a brood chamber. The immatures are then abandoned as eggs or first instar larvae.
2. O.planatus Castelnau and O.formosus Chevrolat usually construct brood balls of dung within animal droppings. Each brood is progressively enlarged by the addition of further dung after egg-laying. This enlargement is slight in O.planatus and marked in O.formosus. Parental females of both species remain in the brood chambers during development of the immatures which are abandoned principally as pupae.
3. Under very moist experimental conditions, O.planatus buries dung and constructs broods shallowly in the soil. Such nests are frequently connected to the pad by a short tunnel.
4. From a consideration of behavioural patterns it is suggested that the specialized nesting habits of these species have been derived from those of dung-burying ancestors similar to the modern genus, Euoniticellus, through reduction and loss of tunnelling in the soil.  相似文献   
3.
ABSTRACT. In Oniticellus cinctus (F.) the nest chambers each contain about twenty brood balls. Females enlarge the brood balls during the egg and larval stages and remain in the chamber for the whole period of brood development (1 month); they then make a new nest after 1 week. The presence of the brood releases parental care and ensures that the mother remains in the nest: she repairs defects in the brood balls and the nest, and expels other O. cinctus females. A new ball is formed around a naked O. cinctus larva, but larvae of other species are killed. In addition, the brood inhibits oviposition: removal (or addition) of brood balls stimulates (or inhibits) egg laying. In inhibited ovarioles, existing follicles are resorbed and production of new ones ceases. Control of clutch size by the brood is an adaptation to the nest structure and life history of O. cinctus. It may have an important role in the reproductive strategy of other insects with parental care.  相似文献   
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