The dung beetle fauna of the Big Bend region of Texas (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae)
Author
Edmonds, W. D.
text
Insecta Mundi
2018
2018-07-27
642
1
30
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.3708186
f503e20e-e3fb-41ac-bf17-bdaf221bc7c7
1942-1354
3708186
55CCB217-771C-499D-9110-36F143C375C5
Copris
Müller
The genus
Copris
occurs world-wide, with most of its 225 or so species occurring in Africa and Asia. Tropical Africa alone is home to about 100 species (
Cambefort and Nguyen-Phung 1996
). They are absent from
Australia
and all but the northwestern corner of South America.
McCleve and Kohlmann (2005)
reported 32 species (some of which include recognized subspecies) in the Western Hemisphere. Of these, only one (
C. incertus
Say
) reaches South America, nine inhabit the
United States
, while the remaining occur in
Mexico
and Central America. Four species (
C. arizonensis
Schaeffer
,
C. remotus
LeConte
,
C. lecontei
Matthews
and
C. macclevei
Warner
) are shared between
Mexico
and the
United States
. The likely closest relative of
C. arizonensis
is
C. warneri
McCleve and Kohlmann
, a Mexican species from the mountains of Chihuahua and Sonora likely also associated with
Neotoma
(
McCleve and Kohlmann 2005
)
. The genus in the Western Hemisphere was revised by
Matthews (1961)
.
The nesting behavior of the genus is described by
Halffter and Matthews (1966)
and
Halffter and Edmonds (1982)
; it is unusual among dung beetles in that it exhibits active parental care of the brood. Most
Copris
species for which habits are known are nocturnal and exploit the excrement of surface mammals. Four Mexico–US species have known relationships with nesting vertebrates:
C. arizonensis
and
C. macclevei
with wood rats [
Neotoma
],
C. megasoma
with gophers [
Thomomys
] and
C. gopheri
with the gopher tortoise [
Gopherus polyphemus
Daudin
]. In these cases, the adults utilize the feces of their vertebrate host for feeding and nesting in the soil beneath nest chambers and tunnels; only rarely are they attracted to feces-baited pitfall traps.