Pertanika J. Trop. Agric. Sci. 38 (4): 531 - 532 (2015)
ISSN: 1511-3701 © Universiti Putra Malaysia Press
TROPICAL AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE
Journal homepage: http://www.pertanika.upm.edu.my/
Article history:
Received: 4 February 2015
Accepted: 16 July 2015
ARTICLE INFO
E-mail addresses:
abdullahmuhaimin1990@gmail.com (Muhaimin, A. M. D.),
izfariza.hazmi@gmail.com (Hazmi, I. R.),
salmah78@ukm.edu.my (Yaakop, S.)
* Corresponding author
Colonisation of Dung Beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae)
of Smaller Body Size in the Bangi Forest Reserve, Selangor,
Malaysia: A Model Sampling Site for a Secondary Forest Area
Muhaimin, A. M. D., Hazmi, I. R. and Yaakop, S.*
Centre for Insect Systematics, School of Environmental and Natural Resource Sciences, Faculty of Science
and Technology, 43600 Bangi, Selangor, Malaysia
ABSTRACT
The diversity of dung beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) was measured at the Bangi
Forest Reserve in Selangor, Malaysia (Hutan Simpan Bangi, HSB), as a model sampling
site for the secondary forest ecosystem. The diversity analysis gave a value of 2.17 for the
Shannon diversity index (H’), 1.42 for the richness index (R’) and 0.87 for the evenness
index (E). A total of 575 individuals belonging to 10 species of dung beetles were collected.
They comprised of Catharsius renaudpauliani, Catharsius sp. 1, Microcopris aff. hidakai,
Onthophagus “obscurior group”, Onthophagus crassicollis, O. recticornutus, O. rutilans,
O. trituber, Paragymnopleurus maurus and Sisyphus thoracicus. The small dung beetle
Onthophagus crassicollis had the highest number of individuals (137/575, 23.83%) with
a body size range of 4.5 ± 2.5 mm in length. A total of 9/10 species collected in HSB were
classiied as small-bodied species (8% large body, 92% small body) and the statistical
analysis showed a signiicant body size difference compared with the large-bodied species,
C. renaudpauliani. O. crassicollis showed the highest abundance in the secondary forest, a
model site for studying forest disturbance. The abundance of dung beetles could potentially
be used as a good bioindicator of habitat disruption in the tropical forest ecosystem. Our
study also highlighted that the abundance of species based on body size was affected by
the availability of the food sources also from different sizes of mammal dung.
Keywords: Scarab beetles, biodiversity, bioindicator,
Shannon diversity index
INTRODUCTION
Dung beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae)
belong to one of the insect groups that are
well-studied because they play multiple