2013-10-21 21:53
Cape Town - Western Cape residents have a reputation for being different to their up-country cousins, and so too, it seems, do the region's dung beetles.
According to a University of the Witwatersrand researcher, three species of West Coast dung beetles, all members of the genus Pachysoma, have given up flying and taken to "galloping".
Such behaviour is really odd, Professor Marcus Byrne said in a statement on Monday.
"Most insects walk with a tripod gait. They plant three legs in a triangle, while swinging the other three legs forward. It's an incredibly stable way of walking because you've always got three legs on the ground.
"For an insect to abandon the tripod gait and use its legs together in pairs like a galloping horse is really radical. The big question is: why are they doing it?"
Byrne said the three beetle species - Pachysoma glentoni, Pachysoma hippocrates and Pachysoma endroedyi - had not only changed the way they moved across land, but also lost their ability to fly.
"There are 800 species of dung beetle in South Africa and most of them fly. To fly makes sense, because pooh is a very ephemeral resource. It's only useful for a few days and it's very patchy. You don't know where you're going to find the next dropping.
"That's why Pachysoma is so weird. Why would anyone give up flying?" Byrne and his colleagues think the beetles may have done so to conserve moisture in the harsh semi-desert environment in which they live.
They may have changed the way they walk to help navigate their way through the West Coast sand.
"For most dung beetles, it's always a one way trip - grab the pooh, run away and never go back. The very marked pacing of Pachysoma's gallop might be giving it a better signal in terms of estimating the return distance from the food to its nest."
According to Byrne: "The unique behaviour of this galloping, flightless species has allowed it to dominate a niche market among dung collectors of the Western Cape."
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Interesting or Unusual Behaviour
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'Niche market' for W Cape dung beetles
Sometimes it’s not until you don’t see what you want to see, that you truly open your eyes.
Re: 'Niche market' for W Cape dung beetles
Galloping dun beetles
Hmmmm........Well , with everything here in the Western Cape being done at a leisurely pace , it is encouraging at last to hear of something being done at speed
Hmmmm........Well , with everything here in the Western Cape being done at a leisurely pace , it is encouraging at last to hear of something being done at speed
Enough is enough
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Re: 'Niche market' for W Cape dung beetles
"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
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Re: 'Niche market' for W Cape dung beetles
According to Byrne: "The unique behaviour of this galloping, flightless species has allowed it to dominate a niche market among dung collectors of the Western Cape."
Ja....the dung collecting and distributing sector is a cut-throat business in the Western Cape of late!
Ja....the dung collecting and distributing sector is a cut-throat business in the Western Cape of late!
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Re: 'Niche market' for W Cape dung beetles
Not sure , but it sounds as if this is only recent behaviour Lot's of the stuff being flung around lately , and with increasing competition for it ......
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Re: Interesting or Unusual Behaviour
I've taken these pics of a Shongololo, no idea what specie, in Marakele at the picnic spot during our November trip. The soil was moist from the previous day's rain. I've noticed these fan shaped flowers in the sand and took a few pics. All of a sudden a Shongololo reversed out of the hole pushing the dirt out in a fan shape. I had no idea that Shongololos even lived underground. We watched this one for about 10 minutes pushing the dirt out of his hole.
Imagine RhiNOs!
We have to stand together to STOP the madness!
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We have to stand together to STOP the madness!
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Re: Interesting or Unusual Behaviour
wow nice... like on the beach
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