Carabid beetles of tropical dry forests display traits that cope with a harsh environment

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Ariza , G M , Jacome , J & Kotze , D J 2021 , ' Carabid beetles of tropical dry forests display traits that cope with a harsh environment ' , International Journal of Tropical Insect Science , vol. 41 , pp. 3011-3021 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s42690-021-00493-9

Title: Carabid beetles of tropical dry forests display traits that cope with a harsh environment
Author: Ariza, Gloria Maria; Jacome, Jorge; Kotze, D. Johan
Contributor organization: Ecosystems and Environment Research Programme
Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science (HELSUS)
Helsinki Institute of Urban and Regional Studies (Urbaria)
Fifth Dimension - Vegetated roofs and walls in urban areas
Urban Ecosystems
Date: 2021-12
Language: eng
Number of pages: 11
Belongs to series: International Journal of Tropical Insect Science
ISSN: 1742-7584
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s42690-021-00493-9
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/336868
Abstract: The tropical dry forest (TDF) ecosystem is characterised by strong seasonality exasperated periodically by the El Nino/southern oscillation (ENSO). The environment produced by this event could constrain the survival of small organisms, such as insects. Carabid beetles were collected in a TDF in Armero, Colombia, during wet and dry seasons in both El Nino and non-El Nino periods. A series of traits linked to desiccation resistance were measured to characterise their adaptation to the TDF environment and to investigate changes experienced by carabid beetles during both episodes in quantitative (assemblage) and qualitative (traits) parameters. We found no difference in the presence of traits between El Nino and non-El Nino episodes, but carabid assemblages changed significantly in composition and assemblage structure between these episodes. During both periods, small-sized and nocturnal species dominated the assemblages, but in terms of number of individuals, medium and large-sized, and visual hunter species dominated. Calosoma alternans and Megacephala affinis were the most abundant species with high dispersal capacity. Carabid beetles exhibited morphological traits well-adapted to drought experienced in TDF, including when it is exasperated by ENSO. However, long-term studies can help to elucidate the real effects of ENSO and to confirm the adaptation of carabid beetles to cope with this extreme environment.
Subject: 1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology
Drought
ENSO
Ground beetles
Insects
Neotropical
Traits
ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES
DESICCATION RESISTANCE
FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY
BODY-SIZE
EYE MORPHOLOGY
COLEOPTERA CARABIDAE
WATER-BALANCE
HABITAT DEMANDS
DIAPAUSE
EL-NINO
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by_nc_nd
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: acceptedVersion


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