Carabus japonicus
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| Carabus japonicus | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Class: | Insecta |
| Order: | Coleoptera |
| Suborder: | Adephaga |
| Family: | Carabidae |
| Genus: | Carabus |
| Species: | C. japonicus |
| Binomial name | |
| Carabus japonicus Motschulsky, 1858 | |
Carabus japonicus is a ground beetle endemic to Japan.[1] It inhabits the southwestern Japanese forests and is most frequently observed between May and September, with peak observations occurring mid-August.[2] C. japonicus is a univoltine species, meaning it has one brood of offspring per year. Its larvae prey exclusively on earthworms. At lower altitudes, the reproductive cycle has been shown to coincide with the abundance of earthworms. This demonstrates the synchronization between the life cycles of the two species.[3] The males tend to be slightly smaller than the females with both sexes having median body sizes of 24 mm and 26 mm, respectively.[4] However, there is a large variation in intraspecific body size due to factors other than sex. These factors include parent size, food availability, and habitat temperature.[5]
Diet
Carabus japonicus larvae are specialized earthworm predators. Their predation success is dependent on earthworm size. Larger earthworms present a greater predatory challenge. Therefore, the success of larvae decreases with an increase in earthworm size. It follows that geographical variation in earthworm size may affect the body size of C. japonicus. A study examined the life cycle and abundance of earthworms at six different sites of varying altitudes. Earthworms appeared from April to September in all six study sites. At lower altitudes, the abundance of earthworms fell off dramatically after July. However, this effect was absent in the elevated sites. The median body weight of earthworms increased from April to July. This phenomenon was particularly apparent in the low-altitude sites.[7] Larger beetles may be favored in the summer at lower altitudes because of the larger prey size. Larger females lay larger eggs. Therefore, they confer a phenotypic advantage to their progeny in environments where earthworms are larger. The diet of adult C. japonicus is more versatile than in its larval stage. It feeds on animals other than earthworms, like snails, slugs, isopods, and even dead vertebrates.[8]
Behavior
Mating
An experiment was conducted to demonstrate the effectiveness of body length differences to prevent interspecific copulation. A male and female of differing species (C. japonicus and C. dehaanii), were placed in a box together. Males of both species attempted to mate with the heterospecific female at a rate similar to that observed in intraspecific pairings. However, C. japonicus males are approximately 5 mm smaller than their C. dehaanii male counterparts. The difference in size between the heterospecific pairings resulted in the blocking of aedeagus insertion and unsuccessful spermatophore deposition. In this way, body size differences act as an effective reproductive barrier between C. japonicus and C. dehaanii.[9] This effect can be generalized to other species interactions. Neither male to male competition (i.e. aggressive intraspecific conflict and territorial defense) nor courtship behavior is observed in C. japonicus. Instead, it has a mating system of promiscuity, in which there are no pair bonds. Females accept multiple matings with multiple males.[5] A male recognizes a female by chemical signaling, approaches, and mounts its back. Males deposit larger spermatophores when mated with larger females.[10] This is because larger females have more mature eggs. Copulation duration increases with an increase in male reproductive organ weight. This could be due to the increased time to deposit a larger spermatophore. However, smaller males stay mounted for longer (a 300-minute maximum, compared to a 50-minute maximum of their larger counterparts). This serves purposes other than insemination like mate guarding and assurance of sperm transfer into the spermatheca). Here, we see two distinct mating tactics, one offensive, the other defensive. Larger males spend less time in a mating posture, which permits more frequent copulations. Alternatively, smaller males spend more time in a mating posture, which increases likelihood of paternity (i.e. no spermatophore competition or displacement).[5] Remating inhibition by seminal substances has been confirmed in C. japonicus through the induction of female refractory period. This function benefits males by decreasing spermatophore competition, but costs females through reducing mating opportunities, which could boost offspring fitness. Although females experience increased fecundity from increased mating, it also causes them physiological harm. Females can control the amount of ejaculation per mating through shifting mating posture.[5]
Predation
Carabus japonicus larvae attack earthworms by snapping at them with their sharp, arcuate mandibles. When confined with earthworms in a box, C. japonicus will attack regardless of earthworm size. However, success among all instars (one through five) decreased with the increase in relative body weight of the earthworms. Conversely, success increased in all instars with the decrease in relative body weight of the earthworms.[7] Small C. japonicus were unsuccessful in their predation attempts when it was thrown off by the earthworm's secretion of mucus and thrashing. When successful, it continuously bit until the earthworm's thrashing ceased and it became motionless. The C. japonicus proceeded with external ingestion of the carcass. Ohomopterus larvae can attack earthworms up to 400 times greater in body weight than themselves.[8] To provide sufficient nutrition, the earthworm attacked needs to be 50 to 100 times heavier than the larva. C. japonicus sits and waits for prey.[7] Upon detection of an earthworm, it probes the earthworm's body and snaps violently at its underside.[8]