Catharsius Heros Boheman, 1860 Male (3558634343)
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''Catharsius'' is a genus of dung beetles in the tribe
Coprini Coprini is a tribe of scarab beetles, in the dung beetle subfamily (Scarabaeinae). Scholtz et al. describe them as tunnellers that are shiny black, of moderate to large size (9–30 mm long) and with a strongly convex shape. They also, howev ...
(subfamily
Scarabaeinae The scarab beetle subfamily Scarabaeinae consists of species collectively called true dung beetles (there are also dung beetles in other subfamilies and families). Most of the beetles of this subfamily feed exclusively on dung. However, some ma ...
) in the scarab family. It contains about 100 species of intermediate to large size (), black or brown, living in the tropical areas of the Old World. Tropical Africa contains about 85 species, with the remaining 15 in tropical Asia. ''Catharsius'' are typically short and convex scarabs, with horns on head and forebody of males, sometimes also of females. They mostly live in grasslands and pastures, occasionally in forests, where they eat large mammals’ dung, using it to make pedotrophic nests in which their offspring develop. A few species shifted from coprophagy to necrophagy, and use small vertebrates carcasses as food for both adults and larvae. Due to their rather large size and occasional abundance, ''Catharsius'' species play important roles in the ecology and soil dynamics of tropical areas. They bury vast amounts of dung into the ground, thus improving the quality and texture of the soils. Also, they contribute to “clean” the surface of the ground, hence their name (from the Greek ''katharsios'' “purifier”). Important species are '' Catharsius molossus'' (Linnaeus, 1758), one of the most widespread and abundant coprophagous species in tropical Asian regions; ''C. sesostris'' Waterhouse, 1888, also coprophagous, widespread and common in savannas and semidesertic zones in Africa and Near East; ''C. eteocles'' Laporte, 1840, important necrophagous species in Western Africa, etc. Among less common species, ''C. mirabilis'' Felsche, 1901, occasionally abundant in Eastern Africa, displays a strong sexual dimorphism making it one of the most spectacular African
dung beetles Dung beetles are beetles that feed on feces. All species of dung beetle belong to the superfamily Scarabaeoidea, most of them to the subfamilies Scarabaeinae and Aphodiinae of the family Scarabaeidae (scarab beetles). As most species of Scara ...
. '' Catharsius gorilla'' is a species widespread in the
tropical Africa The Afrotropical realm is one of the Earth's eight biogeographic realms. It includes Sub-Saharan Africa, the southern Arabian Peninsula, the island of Madagascar, and the islands of the western Indian Ocean. It was formerly known as the Ethiopi ...
n regions. An additional group of some 65, much smaller () species, mostly from tropical Africa, is sometimes erected into a separate genus: ''Metacatharsius'' Paulian, 1939. Recently, the name “Catharsius” has been selected by a team of entomologists working on dung beetle fauna of Western Africa.


References

*Balthasar (Vladimir), Monographie der Scarabaeidae und Aphodiidae der palaearktischen und orientalischen Region. Czech Academy of Sciences, 1963. *Davis (A.L.V.), Frolov (A.V.), Scholtz (C.H.), The African Dung Beetle Genera. Protea Book House, 2008. *Hanski (I.) and Cambefort (Y.), eds. Dung Beetle Ecology. Princeton University Press, 1991.


External links

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Picture of the beetle
*http://www.eol.org/pages/16872
Isolation of ''Escherichia coli'' O157:H7 from dung beetles ''Catharsius molossus''
*http://www.catharsius.fr/ Coprini Scarabaeidae genera {{Scarabaeidae-stub