On the road of dung: hypothetical dispersal routes of dung beetles in the circum–Sicilian volcanic islands. Animal Biodiversity and Conservation 39.2 (2016): 161-71. (original) (raw)

Dung beetle assemblages organization in two contrasted areas of the Mediterranean region: affinities and divergences

Annales de la Société Entomologique de France, 2011

Quantifi cation of the species richness and diversity is important when comparing sites; these variables are infl uenced by local and regional factors. The structure of assemblages of dung beetles as well as their species composition and diversity were compared between two sites on both sides of the Mediterranean Sea (France FR and Tunisia TN). From a total of 132 traps, 15,778 specimens were collected belonging to 86 species (46 in FR vs. 40 in TN). Species composition varied highly between FR and TN (only 10 species in common). The temporal occurrence of Aphodiidae and Scarabaeidae showed different patterns due to several factors: phenology of species, geographical distribution and local ecological requirements. When quantifying the beta diversity, the turnover of species was for almost cases higher within the same season than between seasons. Moreover, seasonal turnover was different at both sites. Evenness and rank-abundance analyses demonstrated that autumn-winter was the most constraining season in FR, with one dominant species (Agrilinus constans) in winter assemblages (96.8% of individuals). Conversely summer was the most constraining season in TN, with Onthophagus taurus as dominant species in assemblages (87.7%). The infl uence of local and historical factors is discussed. Résumé. Organisation des assemblages de bousiers dans deux aires contrastées de la région méditerranéenne : affi nités et divergences. La quantifi cation de la richesse et de la diversité spécifi que sont des paramètres importants lorsque l'on compare des sites entre eux, ces variables pouvant être infl uencées par des facteurs locaux et régionaux et l'histoire des peuplements. La structure des communautés de coléoptères coprophages, leur composition et leur diversité ont été comparées pour deux sites situés de part et d'autre de la Méditerranée (France FR et Tunisie TN), semblables par leur physionomie mais ayant eu une histoire différente. Pour un total de 132 pièges régulièrement relevés pendant plus d'une année dans chaque site, 15778 individus ont été recueillis appartenant à 86 espèces (46 en France et 40 en Tunisie). La composition spécifi que s'est avérée très différente entre les deux sites, avec seulement 10 espèces en commun. L'occurrence temporelle des Aphodiidae et des Scarabaeidae montre différents modèles répondant à plusieurs facteurs: la phénologie des espèces, la répartition géographique et les exigences écologiques locales. L'analyse de la diversité bêta montre que le taux de remplacement des espèces (turnover) était plus élevé pour une même saison qu'entre des saisons successives, les valeurs du turnover saisonnier étant différentes entre les deux sites ce qui implique un fonctionnement différent de leurs communautés. L'analyse des valeurs de l'équitabilité et des modèles rang-abondance montre que la période automne-hiver est la plus contraignante en FR, avec une seule espèce dominante (Agrilinus constans) dans les assemblages (96,8% des individus). Inversement, l'été est la saison la plus contraignante en TN, avec Onthophagus taurus qui domine très largement dans les assemblages estivaux (87,7% des individus). L'infl uence des facteurs écologiques locaux et historiques est discutée.

Biogeography of tenebrionid beetles (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) in the circum-Sicilian islands (Italy, Sicily): Multiple biogeographical patterns require multiple explanations

European Journal of Entomology, 2011

The tenebrionid beetles on 25 circum-Sicilian islands were studied to determine the influence of island geographical and landscape features on three main intercorrelated biogeographical patterns: (1) species richness, studied using species-area and species environment relationships, (2) species assemblage composition, investigated using Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA), and inter-site faunal similarity, investigated using Canonical Correlation Analysis (CANCOR) applied to multidimensional scaling of inter-island faunal dissimilarities. Species richness was mostly influenced by island area and landscape heterogeneity (expressed using various indices of diversity based on land cover categories). When species identities were considered in the CCA, no substantial effect of landscape was detected. Current island isolation did not have a strong influence on species richness, but has a distinct effect in determining species assortments on the remotest islands. Historical influences of Pleistocene landbridge connections were not detectable in species richness relationships using geographical variables in species richness analyses or in assemblage gradients in the CCA, but emerged distinctly from inter-island similarities in the CANCOR. 4

Evidence of late Gelasian dispersal of African fauna at Coste San Giacomo (Anagni Basin, central Italy): Early Pleistocene environments and the background of early human occupation in Europe.

Since the late 70s, the Early Pleistocene (Gelasian) site of Coste San Giacomo (Anagni Basin, central Italy) has been known amongst palaeontologists for its diverse vertebrate fauna. During the last 5 years, new excavations and the drilling of a 46-m-deep core have provided novel pieces of information. Palaeomagnetic data, pollen and small vertebrates analyses are presented here for the first time and combined with the updated list of the large vertebrates and ostracod analysis in a multidisciplinary perspective. Large and small mammals, pollen and ostracod analyses have allowed an integrated palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of the sedimentary sequence, depicting the evolution of the alluvial plain in the surrounding landscape. Moreover, magnetostratigraphy, pollen and small mammal biochronological data have confirmed the position of the Coste San Giacomo Faunal Unit, focusing the possible age of the mammal assemblage around 2.1 Ma, in a reversed phase before the base of the Olduvai chron. In particular, the occurrence of the large vole Mimomys pliocaenicus has important biochronological significance. The Coste San Giacomo site offers a unique opportunity to investigate the faunal and environmental changes that occurred in Mediterranean Europe during the Early Pleistocene, coinciding with major climatic changes at a global scale. The occurrence of taxa such as Hippopotamus sp. in the assemblage provides evidence of early dispersal events of African taxa prior to the early Homo diffusion into Europe.

Diversity and distribution of beetles in a Mediterranean volcanic archipelago: an updated checklist of the Coleoptera of the Aeolian Islands (Sicily, Italy

Biodiversity Journal, 2022

This paper provides a faunal inventory of the Coleoptera of the Aeolian Islands, including both the list of 669 species so far recorded and its update with 192 new records for the archipelago. Sericoderus brevicornis Matthews, 1890 (Corylophidae) is new for Italy; for Anthicus crinitus La Ferté-Sénectère, 1849 (Anthicidae) the second record in Italy is given; Pangus scaritides (Sturm, 1818), Tachyura curvimana (Wollaston, 1854) (Carabidae), Arthrolips convexiuscula (Motschulsky, 1849) (Corylophidae), Dignomus irroratus (Kiesenwetter, 1851) (Ptinidae), Megaloscapa punctipennis (Kraatz, 1856) (Staphylinidae), Aclees taiwanensis Kôno, 1933, Cryphalus numidicus Eichhoff, 1878 and Hypothenemus leprieuri (Perris, 1866) (Curculionidae) are new for Sicily; Migneauxia crassiuscula (Aubé, 1850) (Latridiidae) and Phloeotribus cristatus (Fauvel, 1889) (Curculionidae) are confirmed for this region. For 193 species new distributional data are also given; among these latter, some concern the narrow

PANTALEONI R. A., CESARONI C., COSSU C. S., DELIPERI S., FADDA L., FOIS X., LENTINI A., LOI A., LORU L., MOLINU A., NUVOLI M. T., RAMASSINI W., SASSU A., SERRA G., VERDINELLI M., 2012. Impact of alien insect pests on Sardinian landscape and culture. - Biodiversity Journal, 3(4): 297-310.

Geologically Sardinia is a raft which, for just under thirty million years, has been crossing the western Mediterranean, swaying like a pendulum from the Iberian to the Italian Peninsula. An island so large and distant from the other lands, except for its "sister" Corsica, has inevitably developed an autochthonous flora and fauna over such a long period of time. Organisms from other Mediterranean regions have added to this original contingent. These new arrivals were not randomly distributed over time but grouped into at least three great waves. The oldest two correspond with the Messinian salinity crisis about 7 million years ago and with the ice age, when, in both periods, Sardinia was linked to or near other lands due to a fall in sea level. The third, still in progress, is linked to human activity. Man has travelled since ancient times and for many centuries introduced allochthonous species to Sardinia which radically modified the native flora and fauna, but always at a very slow and almost unnoticeable rate.

Man and lacertids on the Mediterranean islands: conservation perspectives

1999

CLAUDIA CORTI1, WOLFGANG BÖHME2, MASSIMO DELFINO3 & MARCO MASSETI4 Department of Animal Biology and Genetics, University of Florence, Via Romana, 17, I – 50125 Florence, Italy (e-mail: corti@eurorock.dbag.unifi.it) Zoologisches Forschungsinstitut und Museum »Alexander Koenig«, Adeanuerallee 160, D – 53113 Bonn, Germany (e-mail: W.Boehme.ZFMK@Uni-Bonn.De) Vertebrate Paleontology Research Group, Earth Science Department, Florence University, Via G. La Pira, 4, I – 50121 Florence, Italy (e-mail: delfino@geo.unifi.it) Institute of Anthropology, University of Florence, Via Del Proconsolo, 12, I – 50122 Florence, Italy (e-mail: okra@iol.it)

Reconstructing ancient Mediterranean crossroads inDeronectesdiving beetles

Journal of Biogeography, 2016

Aim To reconstruct the evolutionary history of a genus of freshwater beetle with a pan-Mediterranean distribution, to test classic hypotheses which proposed a Miocene origin for groups with high biodiversity in the Iberian and Anatolian peninsulas. Location Mediterranean basin. Methods We sequenced four mitochondrial and one nuclear gene from 51 specimens of 30 of the ca. 60 extant species of Deronectes (Dytiscidae), all typical of mid-mountain streams from North Africa and Iberia over most of Europe to the Middle East. We used Maximum Likelihood, Bayesian probabilities with an a priori evolutionary rate and a Dispersal-Extinction-Cladogenesis model to reconstruct their biogeographical history. Results Deronectes has two major lineages which originated in the mid Miocene; one including mostly eastern and another mainly western and central Mediterranean species. From these two areas range expansions, mainly at the end of the Miocene and beginning of the Pliocene, resulted in the many species groups and some of the extant species of the genus. Most of the current diversity and distributions are, however, of Plio-Pleistocene origin, particularly in widespread European species. Main conclusions In line with traditional hypotheses, we found an ancient division between eastern and western Mediterranean lineages of Deronectes, likely resulting from the isolation of Europe west of the Alps from the Balkans and Anatolia during the earlymiddle Miocene. The history of the genus was strongly influenced by major geological and climatic events , with successive cycles of fragmentation and subsequent eastward and westward range expansions, resulting in a steady accumulation of species across the basin. Most of these range movements took place through the north side of the Mediterranean, with only local displacements in the south during the Messinian and a recent (Pleistocene) colonization of the Italian peninsula, which remained largely submerged through most of the genus' evolutionary history.