Dung beetles from two sustainable-use protected forests in the Brazilian Amazon

Biodivers Data J. 2023 Mar 16:11:e96101. doi: 10.3897/BDJ.11.e96101. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Background: The Amazon Forest is one of the world's most biodiverse ecosystems and yet its protected areas are understudied concerning insects and other invertebrates. These organisms are essential for tropical forests due to their ecological processes, with some species being very sensitive to habitat disturbances. Dung beetles (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae, Scarabaeinae) have been used as bioindicators for more than 30 years and were surveyed to assess the insect biodiversity of two sustainable-use forest reserves in the Brazilian Amazon.

New information: We report inventories of dung beetles from two Amazonian forest reserves in Pará State, Brazil: the Tapajós National Forest and the Carajás National Forest. Surveys were carried out with baited-pitfall traps installed in 2010, 2016, 2017 and 2019. We collected a total of 3,772 individuals from 19 genera and 96 species. We highlight the importance of Amazonian protected areas as refugia for insect biodiversity, particularly dung beetles, which contribute to many key ecosystem processes.

Keywords: Amazonia; Coleoptera; Scarabaeinae; biodiversity; dung beetles; sustainable-use forests; tropical ecosystems.

Grants and funding

FF acknowledges funding provided by the Liv Sidse Jansen Foundation (Project ID: 1777136) and ‘Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico’ (CNPq) through INCT-SinBiAm (CNPq 406767/2022-0), PELD-RAS (CNPq-CAPES 441659/2016-0 & 441573/2020-7), SEM-FLAMA (CNPq-PrevFogo-IBAMA 441949/2018-5) and RESFLORA (MCIC-CNPq 420254/2018-8). EC, VCS and MEM were funded by the ‘Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior’ (CAPES, code 001). FZVM acknowledges funding provided by CNPq for productivity scholarships (306745/2016-0) and the ‘Laboratório de Scarabaeoidologia’ (subproject EECBio 01.12.0359.00 [UFMT/Finep]).