Aphodius
| Aphodius | |
|---|---|
 
 | |
| Aphodius pedellus, Canada | |
| Scientific classification  | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia | 
| Phylum: | Arthropoda | 
| Class: | Insecta | 
| Order: | Coleoptera | 
| Suborder: | Polyphaga | 
| Infraorder: | Scarabaeiformia | 
| Family: | Scarabaeidae | 
| Subfamily: | Aphodiinae | 
| Tribe: | Aphodiini | 
| Genus: | Illiger, 1798  | 


Aphodius is a genus of beetles in the family Scarabaeidae. In most species both the adults and larvae are coprophagous (dung feeding)[1] although some species have herbivorous or saprophagous larvae.[2] Aphodius species typically dominate dung beetle communities in north temperate ecosystems.[3] Most species are functionally classified as endocoprids, also known as dwellers, because the larvae live and feed within the dung pat itself.[4]
With a discovery of an earlier published version by Hellwig, the correct citation for this genus is now: Aphodius Hellwig, 1798 (p. 101; 24 January). Type species by subsequent designation by Latreille (1810): Scarabaeus fimetarius Linnaeus, 1758.[5]
Species
These 44 species belong to the genus Aphodius, including 21 extinct species.[6]
- Aphodius beloni Mulsant & Godart, 1879
 - Aphodius calichromus Balthasar, 1932
 - Aphodius cardinalis Reitter, 1892
 - Aphodius clypeatus Fischer von Waldheim, 1821
 - Aphodius coniugatus (Panzer, 1795)
 - Aphodius corallifer Koshantschikov, 1913
 - Aphodius crux Wiedemann, 1823
 - Aphodius elegans Allibert, 1847
 - Aphodius fasciger Harold, 1881
 - Aphodius fimetarius (Linnaeus, 1758)
 - Aphodius foetidus (Herbst, 1783)
 - Aphodius guangdongensis Maté, 2008
 - Aphodius irregularis Westwood, 1839
 - Aphodius marginatus Fischer von Waldheim, 1842
 - Aphodius micros Walker, 1871
 - Aphodius minatorius Péringuey, 1908
 - Aphodius pedellus (Degeer, 1774)
 - Aphodius pedrosi Wollaston, 1854
 - Aphodius plasoni Käufel, 1914
 - Aphodius reginae Král, 1997
 - Aphodius spadix Schmidt, 1916
 - Aphodius swaneticus Reitter, 1892
 - Aphodius thoracicus Fischer von Waldheim, 1842
 - † Aphodius aboriginalis Wickham, 1912
 - † Aphodius anteactus Krell, 2000
 - † Aphodius bosniaskii Handlirsch, 1907
 - † Aphodius brevipennis Heer, 1862
 - † Aphodius charauxi Piton, 1940
 - † Aphodius cretaceous Nikolajev, 2008
 - † Aphodius florissantensis Wickham, 1911
 - † Aphodius granarioides Wickham, 1913
 - † Aphodius helvolus Statz, 1952
 - † Aphodius inundatus Wickham, 1914
 - † Aphodius krantzi Heyden & Heyden, 1866
 - † Aphodius laminicola Wickham, 1910
 - † Aphodius mediaevus Wickham, 1914
 - † Aphodius meyeri Heer, 1847
 - † Aphodius praeemptor Wickham, 1913
 - † Aphodius precursor Horn, 1876
 - † Aphodius schlickumi Statz, 1952
 - † Aphodius senex Wickham, 1914
 - † Aphodius shoshonis Wickham, 1912
 - † Aphodius theobaldi Krell, 2000
 - † Aphodius vectis Krell, 2019
 
The species of the following genera were formerly classified in Aphodius:[7][8]
- Acrossus Mulsant, 1842
 - Agoliinus Schmidt, 1913
 - Alloblackburneus Bordat, 2009
 - Ballucus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Blackburneus Schmidt, 1913
 - Calamosternus Motschulsky, 1859
 - Caligodorus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Cephalocyclus Dellacasa et al., 1998
 - Chilothorax Motschulsky, 1859
 - Cinacanthus Schmidt, 1913
 - Coelotrachelus Schmidt, 1913
 - Colobopterus Mulsant, 1842
 - Cryptoscatomaseter Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Dellacasiellus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Dialytodius Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Drepanocanthoides Schmidt, 1913
 - Eupleurus Mulsant, 1842
 - Flaviellus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Geomyphilus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Haroldiellus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Hornosus Dellacasa, Dellacasa & Gordon, 2015
 - Irrasinus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Labarrus Mulsant & Rey, 1869
 - Lechorodius Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Liothorax Motschulsky, 1859
 - Luxolinus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Maculaphodius Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Melinopterus Mulsant, 1842
 - Mendidius Harold, 1868
 - Merogyrus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Neotrichonotulus Dellacasa et al., 2004
 - Nialaphodius Kolbe, 1908
 - Orodaliscoides Schmidt, 1913
 - Oscarinus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Otophorus Mulsant, 1842
 - Oxyomoides Dellacasa et al., 2016
 - Pardalosus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Phaeaphodius Reitter, 1892
 - Planolinellus Dellacasa & Dellacasa, 2005
 - Planolinoides Dellacasa & Dellacasa, 2005
 - Planolinus Mulsant & Rey, 1869
 - Pseudagolius Schmidt, 1913
 - Rugaphodius Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Scabrostomus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Schaefferellus Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Setodius Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Stenotothorax Schmidt, 1913
 - Strigodius Gordon & Skelley, 2007
 - Tetraclipeoides Schmidt, 1913
 - Teuchestes Mulsant, 1842
 - Trichaphodioides Paulian, 1942
 - Trichonotulus Bedel, 1911
 
References
- ^ Valiela, Ivan (1974). "Composition, food webs, and population limitation in dung arthropod communities during invasion and succession". American Midland Naturalist. 92: 370–385 [380]. doi:10.2307/2424302. JSTOR 2424302.
 - ^ Hanski and Cambefort (1991), p. 83.
 - ^ Hanski and Cambefort (1991), p. 75.
 - ^ Finn, J. A.; Gittings, T. (2003). "A review of competition in north temperate dung beetle communities". Ecological Entomology. 28 (1): 1–13. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2311.2002.00487.x.
 - ^ ALONSO-ZARAZAGA, M.A. & KRELL, F.T. 2011. Change of authorship of Aphodius and Oryctes to Hellwig, 1798 (Insecta: Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae). Zootaxa 3060: 67–68. https://www.mapress.com/zt/article/view/zootaxa.3060.1.5/20827
 - ^ "Aphodius Hellwig, 1798". Catalogue of Life. Retrieved 2021-12-25.
 - ^ Gordon, Robert D. & Skelley, Paul E. (2007). "A monograph of the Aphodiini inhabiting the United States and Canada (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Aphodiini)". Memoirs of the American Entomological Institute. 79: 1–580. ISBN 978-1-887988-23-0.
 - ^ "Aphodius Genus information". Bugguide. Retrieved 2021-12-25.
 
- Hanski, Ilkka & Cambefort, Yves, eds. (1991). Dung Beetle Ecology. Princeton University Press. doi:10.1515/9781400862092. ISBN 9781400862092.
 
