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Specialized habitats
SPECIALIZED HABITATS
a warm microclimate. This may even be the case
with incubation nests of cold-blooded animals
such as crocodiles, snakes, or turtles that lay their
eggs in mounds of decaying vegetation, or
exposed to the sun. The presence of a permanent
resident mammal or bird also provides some
protection, especially if the resident animal is
not an insect eater.
A rich and varied beetle fauna can usually be
found, alongside fleas, flies, their maggots and
other insects, in a typical mammal or bird nest.
Members of some families such as the Leiodidae,
Histeridae, Trogidae, and some subfamilies of
Staphylinidae and Scarabaeidae, are strongly
specialized for the nests or burrows of particular
animal species, and they are seldom found
anywhere else. For example, a striking and
previously unknown diversity of small
dung beetles of the scarab subfamily
Aphodiinae has recently been
discovered in the burrows
of pocket gophers in
supposedly well-known
and well-studied parts of
North America, and
none of the new species
had previously been
discovered in the dung
of surface-dwelling
rodents or other animals.
Examination of a bird
nest after the chicks have
VERTEBRATE NESTS
The nests of vertebrates, here not including
human dwellings, which are discussed separately
(see page 60), provide multiple opportunities for
adults and larvae of beetles. Nests are built by
animals to live in and rear their young. As well as
the bedding material used to make the nest itself,
the nests usually contain numerous potential food
sources for beetles. These include leftover or
discarded food, waste and excrement, feathers or
fur, fungi and molds, the occasional unhatched
egg or dead nestling, and a community of other
invertebrates as scavengers or parasites. The nest
will usually have high humidity, and if the animal
is warm-blooded, such as a mammal or bird,
left | Amblyopinus (Staphylinidae)
These beetles live in the fur of
opossums (as pictured here behind
the ears) and other mammals. They
breed in the nest.