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Down‐sizing of dung beetle assemblages over the last 53 000 years is consistent with a dominant effect of megafauna losses
Authors:Andreas H. Schweiger  Jens‐Christian Svenning
Affiliation:1. Section for Ecoinformatics and Biodiversity, Dept of Bioscience, Aarhus Univ., ?rhus C, Denmark;2. Plant Ecology, Bayreuth Center of Ecology and Environmental Research (BayCEER), Univ. of Bayreuth, Bayreuth, Germany;3. Center for Biodiversity Dynamics in a Changing World (BIOCHANGE), Dept of Bioscience, Aarhus Univ., Aarhus, Denmark
Abstract:The ongoing down‐sizing of the global mammal communities is assumed to have subsequent effects on mutualistic species communities. Dung beetles co‐evolved with large‐sized animals since millennia and depend on the megafauna feces of an appropriate size. Mammal community down‐sizing as a result of past and ongoing megafauna losses is therefore likely to result in a down‐sizing of dung beetle communities. However, empirical evidence for this co‐down‐sizing is lacking especially on larger spatial scales and over extended periods of time. Here, we show a significant down‐sizing of European dung beetle assemblages over the last ~53 000 years by relating Quaternary fossil records with trait information on body size of beetles. This significant down‐sizing of dung beetle communities was thereby not linear, but characterized by a weak decrease until the early Holocene but a strong acceleration in the recent pre‐history, from 6–7000 years BP onwards. This acceleration of down‐sizing coincides with the completion of the Quaternary megafauna extinction and the start of major shifts in human agricultural land‐use. In contrast, assemblage mean body size of non‐coprophagous scarabids as well as ground beetles – two groups of beetles with no or weak relations to megafauna – was observed to increase towards the present with an acceleration of body size increase coinciding with the onset of late‐glacial warming (14 200 years BP). In summary, the observed late‐Quaternary down‐sizing of European dung beetle communities is consistent with an effect of pre‐historic megafauna losses, and not with the coincident general warming. Ongoing down‐sizing of mammal communities is therefore likely to result in further down‐sizing of dung beetle assemblages, with potential effects on their important role for nutrient cycling and secondary seed dispersal in natural and extensive agro‐ecosystems. Future nature management initiatives could halt or even reverse this functional diversity loss via effective protection or restoration of megafauna communities.
Keywords:body size –   temperature relation  Coleoptera  defaunation  megaherbivores  Quaternary megafauna extinction  Scarabaeoidea  trophic rewilding
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