Evolution of Expending Extra Effort in Making a Dung Mass before Making a Brood Ball in the Nesting Behavior of the Female Dung Beetle Copris acutidens (Coleoptera; Scarabaeoidea)

Author:

Akamine Mayumi12,Mishima Tatsuya34

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Science and Engineering, Toyo University, Kujirai 2100, Kawagoe 350-8585, Japan

2. College of Bioresource Science, Nihon University, Kameino 1866, Fujisawa 252-0880, Japan

3. Faculty of Social and Cultural Studies, Kyushu University, Motooka 744, Nishi-ku, Fukuoka 819-0395, Japan

4. Kyushu University Institute for Asian and Oceanian Studies, Motooka 744, Nishi-ku, Fukuoka 819-0395, Japan

Abstract

Nutrient limitations have often caused the evolution of mechanisms for efficient nutrient acquisition. The mouthparts of adult dung beetles efficiently acquire nutrients from a fiber-rich diet. Conversely, primitive mouthparts force larvae to survive on a low-quality diet despite experiencing the most demanding growth stages. In this study, we investigated the nutritional conditions and microbial community of the larval diet through the nesting behavior of the dung beetle Copris acutidens. We revealed that diet quality (C/N ratio) increased during the process of making the brood ball, irrespective of dung type. The sequencing of the bacterial community based on a partial 16S rRNA gene and the fungal community that targeted ITS2 region revealed that the fungal community in the female gut was the closest to the larval diet, whereas the bacterial community was not. The proportion of fungal Trichosporonaceae tended to increase with a decreasing C/N ratio irrespective of dung type and was alive in the larval gut. We suggest that Trichosporonaceae is a gut symbiont of both the adult female and larvae of C. acutidens, which is transmitted to the dung mass and then to larval gut through the brood ball, and that females have evolved the extra effort processes in their nesting behavior to compensate for larval diet quality, which is likely associated with symbiont fungi within the family Trichosporonaceae.

Funder

Fujiwara Natural History Foundation

Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Ecological Modeling,Ecology

Reference39 articles.

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