Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T23:23:12.375Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Cow-dung colonization and decomposition following insect exclusion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2007

C.M. Lee
Affiliation:
School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Woodland Road, Bristol, BS8 1UG, UK
R. Wall*
Affiliation:
School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Woodland Road, Bristol, BS8 1UG, UK
*
*Fax: 00 44 (0)117 925 7374 E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

The rate of dung-pat degradation in cattle pastures in south west England was examined between May and September 2002, using batches of standardized, 1.5 kg, artificially-formed cow pats. In pats in which insects were allowed free access, the rate of disappearance, measured as ash-free dry weight, was faster in spring than summer and the loss of organic matter ranged between 0.69 and 1.99% per day, equating to an estimated time for complete disappearance of 57–78 and 88–111 days in spring and summer, respectively. To assess the role of colonizing insects on decomposition, six batches of pats were constructed and either left uncovered or, using fine mesh cages, were covered for 2, 7 or 14 days following deposition to exclude colonizing insects, after which they were uncovered. After 35 days all pats were then retrieved from the field, the composition of the invertebrate community within each pat was determined and the degree of degradation, measured as ash-free dry weight, was assessed. Covered pats had significantly higher rates of ash-free dry weight loss than uncovered pats. From the 180 pats that were recovered and searched, larvae of Aphodius (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) were the most numerous taxon collected (1435 individuals). Aphodius larvae were significantly more abundant in pats that remained uncovered or were covered for 2 days only, compared to pats that had been covered for 7 or 14 days. The results show that the exclusion of insects for as little as two days following deposition causes a significant reduction in both the insect population and the subsequent rate of pat degradation.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2006

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anderson, J.R., Merritt, R.W. (1977) The impact of foraging meadow larks, Sturnella neglecta, on the degradation of cattle dung pats. Journal of Applied Ecology 14, 355362Google Scholar
Barth, D. (1993) Importance of methodology in the interpretation of factors affecting degradation of dung. Veterinary Parasitology 48, 99108CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bornemissza, G.E. (1976) The Australian dung beetle project 1965–1975. AMRC Review of the Australian Meat Research Committee 30, 130Google Scholar
Bruno, J.F., Stachowicz, J.J., Bertness, M.D. (2003) Inclusion of facilitation into ecological theory. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 18, 119125Google Scholar
Castle, M.E., MacDaid, E. (1972) The decomposition of cattle dung and its effect on pasture. Journal of the British Grassland Society 27, 133137Google Scholar
Connell, J.H., Slayter, R.O. (1977) Mechanisms of succession in natural communities and their role in community stability and organisation. American Naturalist 111, 11191144Google Scholar
Dickinson, C.H., Underhay, V.S.H., Ross, V. (1981) Effect of season, soil fauna, and water content on the decomposition of cattle dung pats. New Phytologist 88, 129141CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Floate, K.D. (1998) Off-target effects of ivermectin on insects and on dung degradation in southern Alberta, Canada. Bulletin of Entomological Research 88, 2535Google Scholar
Floate, K.D., Wardhaugh, K.G., Boxall, A.B.A., Sherratt, T.N. (2005) Faecal residues of veterinary pharmaceuticals: non-target effects in the pasture environment. Annual Review of Entomology 50, 153179CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hanski, I. (1980) Migration to and from cow droppings by coprophagous beetles. Annales Zoologici Fennici 17, 1116Google Scholar
Hirschberger, P. (1998) Spatial distribution, resource utilisation and intraspecific competition in the dung beetle Aphodius ater. Oecologia 116, 136142Google Scholar
Holter, P. (1977) An experiment on dung removal by Aphodius larvae (Scarabaeidae) and earthworms. Oikos 28, 130136CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holter, P. (1979) Effect of dung beetles (Aphodius spp.) and earthworms on the disappearance of cattle dung. Oikos 32, 393402Google Scholar
Hutton, S.A., Giller, P.S. (2003) The effects of the intensification of agriculture on northern temperate dung beetle communities. Journal of Applied Ecology 40, 9941007Google Scholar
Lee, C.M. (2004) The ecology of the insect cow-dung community in south west England. PhD thesis, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.Google Scholar
Lumaret, J.P., Kadiri, N. (1995) The influence of the first wave of colonizing insects on cattle dung dispersal. Pedobiologia 39, 506517CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Madsen, M., Overgaard, B., Holter, P., Pederson, O.C., Brochner, J., Vagn, K.M., Nansen, P., Gronvold, J. (1990) Treating cattle with ivermectin: effects on the fauna and decomposition of dung pats. Journal of Applied Ecology 27, 115Google Scholar
Putman, R. (1983) Carrion and dung: the decomposition of animal wastes London Edward ArnoldGoogle Scholar
Schmidt, C.D. (1983) Activity of avermectin against selected insects in aging manure. Environmental Entomology 12, 455457Google Scholar
Smith, M.D., Wilcox, J.C., Kelly, T., Knapp, A.K. (2004) Dominance not richness determines invasibility of tallgrass prairie. Oikos 106, 253262Google Scholar
Sommer, C., Steffansen, B., Nielsen, B.O., Gronveld, J., Vagn, K.M., Jespersen, J.B., Springborg, J., Nansen, P. (1992) Ivermectin excreted in cattle dung after subcutaneous injection or pour-on treatment: concentrations and impact on dung fauna. Bulletin of Entomological Research 82, 257264Google Scholar
Spratt, D.M. (1997) Endoparasite control strategies: implications for biodiversity of native fauna. International Journal for Parasitology 27, 173180CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stevenson, B.G., Dindal, D.L. (1987a) Functional ecology of coprophagous insects: a review. Pedobiologia 30, 285298CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevenson, B.G., Dindal, D.L. (1987b) Insect effects on decomposition of cow dung in microcosms. Pedobiologia 30, 8192CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strong, L. (1992) Avermectins: a review of their impact on insects of cattle dung. Bulletin of Entomological Research 82, 256274Google Scholar
Strong, L., Brown, T.A. (1987) Avermectins in insect control and biology: a review. Bulletin of Entomological Research 77, 357389Google Scholar
Strong, L., Wall, R., Woolford, A., Djeddour, D. (1996) The effect of faecally excreted ivermectin and fenbendazole on the insect colonisation of cattle dung following the oral administration of sustained-release boluses. Veterinary Parasitology 62, 253266CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Suarez, V.H., Lifschitz, A.L., Sallovitz, J.M., Lanusse, C.E. (2003) Effects of ivermectin and doramectin faecal residues on the invertebrate colonization of cattle dung. Journal of Applied Entomology 127, 481488Google Scholar
Vessby, K. (2001) Habitat and weather affect reproduction and size of the dung beetle Aphodius fossor. Ecological Entomology 26, 430435Google Scholar
Wall, R., Strong, L. (1987) Environmental consequences of treating cattle with the antiparasitic drug ivermectin. Nature 327, 418421Google Scholar
Wardhaugh, K.G., Longstaff, B.C., Lacey, M.J. (1998) Effects of residues of deltamethrin in cattle faeces on the development and survival of three species of dung-breeding insect. Australian Veterinary Journal 76, 273280Google Scholar
Weeda, W.C. (1967) The effect of cattle dung patches on pasture growth, botanical composition, and pasture utilisation. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research 10, 150159CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, E. (1960) The distribution and subsequent disappearance of sheep dung on Pennine moorland. Journal of Animal Ecology 29, 243250Google Scholar
Wratten, S.D., Mead-Briggs, M., Gettinby, G., Ericsson, G., Baggott, D.G. (1993) An evaluation of the potential effects of ivermectin on the decomposition of cattle dung pats. Veterinary Record 133, 365371CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed