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Moving the corpse to hide the evidence: horizontal as well as vertical movement is important when burying beetles cache a carcass

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Abstract

Being the first to discover a resource can provide a competitive advantage (priority effect), even for an animal that is inferior in aggressive contests. Nicrophorus spp. (burying beetles) are known for caching a small vertebrate carcass as provision for their young, reducing volatile cues available to rivals by burying the carcass (vertical movement) and by altering the microbial community. A decomposing carcass, however, can leave cues (residues of decay) on soil and leaf litter that a burying beetle has less opportunity to neutralize. I investigated whether horizontal movement of the carcass by burying beetles, separating the carcass from soil at the site of death, might reduce competition from congeners. When fresh carcasses were placed in the field on top of soil with residues of decay, akin to no horizontal displacement, carcasses were discovered within 24 h by free-flying competitors more frequently (58.2%) than when the carcass was placed 1 m from treated soil (8.3%). In a second experiment, carcasses were more likely to be discovered by burying beetles when a chemical attractant (methyl thiocyanate) was placed near a carcass (0.03 and 0.25 m) than when it was placed more distant (1 and 5 m) or for controls (no attractant). The results suggest that horizontal displacement of a carcass after discovery serves not only to locate a suitable spot for burial but also to reduce information available to rivals searching for the resource.

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Data availability

Data are available at OpenCommons@uconn.edu (#1057) and as a supplementary file.

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Acknowledgements

I thank two reviewers for their helpful comments on the manuscript. The Southern Connecticut Regional Water Authority and the Flanders Nature Preserve granted permission for field experiments.

Funding

This research was supported by the UConn Research Foundation.

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S.T.T. was responsible for the design, data collection and preparation of the manuscript for the study.

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Correspondence to Stephen T. Trumbo.

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The author declares no competing interests.

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The handling and care of animals was covered under IACUC-2 guidelines (E16-006) administered by The University of Connecticut (#A3124-01).

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The author declares no conflict of interest.

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10905_2023_9816_MOESM1_ESM.pdf

Supplementary file1 The number of burying beetles per trap (mean + se) arriving at control carcasses (no supplemental cue), and at carcasses with a MeSCN supplement placed 0.03, 0.25, 1 and 5 m from the carcass, shown separately for fresh carcasses and 2-day carcasses. Carcasses scavenged by vertebrates excluded (PDF 17 KB).

Supplementary file2 (XLSX 15 KB)

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Trumbo, S.T. Moving the corpse to hide the evidence: horizontal as well as vertical movement is important when burying beetles cache a carcass. J Insect Behav 36, 11–19 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10905-023-09816-9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10905-023-09816-9

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