Dietary Specialisation Shapes Gut Bacterial Diversity in Dung Beetles: Insights From Coprophagy to Millipede Carnivory
Johann C. de Beer, Kazeem A. Alayande, Christian W. W. Pirk, Rasheed A. Adeleke, Catherine L. Sole

TL;DR
This study shows how different diets in dung beetles shape their gut bacteria, with millipede-eating species having the most unique microbiomes.
Contribution
The first characterization of gut microbiota in millipede-feeding dung beetles and evidence of diet-driven microbial convergence.
Findings
Diet strongly influences gut bacterial composition in dung beetles.
Millipede-feeding species host the most distinct and least diverse gut microbiomes.
Shared bacterial communities suggest diet promotes microbial convergence across host phylogeny.
Abstract
Dung beetles are ecosystem engineers, providing ecosystem services like nutrient cycling, waste degradation and parasite suppression. Their gut microbiome is essential for exploiting specialised diets, yet the eco‐evolutionary factors driving microbial composition across diverse feeding strategies remain ambiguous. Here, we show that diet strongly influences gut bacterial composition across seven dung beetle species specialising in coprophagy, necrophagy, detritophagy, fungivory and carnivory. Most dietary specialisations grouped separately, though fungivores clustered with carrion and millipede feeders. The millipede‐feeding species, Sceliages brittoni and S. hippias, hosted the most distinct and least diverse gut microbiomes. Taxonomically, differences were driven by distinct marker taxa, many of which are consistently isolated across taxonomic orders with similar diets. For example,…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect symbiosis and bacterial influences · Entomopathogenic Microorganisms in Pest Control · Freshwater macroinvertebrate diversity and ecology
