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British Ecological Society Press Release

Monday 10 January 2011

Ginger is key ingredient in recipe for conserving stag beetles

The humble ginger root could be the key to conserving the UK's largest and most spectacular terrestrial beetle – the stag beetle. Ecologists from Royal Holloway, University of London and the University of York have developed a series of new methods to monitor stag beetle numbers – including ginger lures to trap adult beetles and tiny microphones to detect sounds made by the larvae in their underground nests. Conservation efforts have been hampered until now because ecologists lacked a reliable way of monitoring stag beetle numbers.

Male stag beetle. Male Stag Beetle. Copyright Deborah Harvey. (Copyright: Deborah Harvey, Press)The new research, published in the Royal Entomological Society's journal Insect Conservation and Diversity, found that a combination of ginger-baited aerial traps to catch adult stag beetles, plus tiny microphones to record the underground larvae's sounds and samplers to detect the chemicals they emit, give an accurate picture of the species' abundance.

According to Dr Deborah Harvey, one of the study's authors: “Our new methods offer genuine promise for monitoring the population of this elusive and rare insect, one that we think is declining across much of its European range. We need to know where the stag beetle lives – and in what numbers – to be able to conserve it effectively.”

Harvey and her colleagues discovered ginger was irresistible to adult stag beetles only after testing the attractiveness of many other fruit and vegetables – including banana, strawberry, tomato and cherry – as well as wine and beer. Ginger works because it contains large amounts of alpha copaene, a chemical known to attract other insects that live in dead and decaying wood.

By using ginger, and designing the trap using heavy duty plastic, Harvey was able to produce a very cost-effective trap, which is vital because most insect monitoring in the UK is done by a small army of dedicated but unfunded amateur recorders.

Using other methods of trapping insects, such as light traps or traps baited with food, do not work with adult stag beetles because they are not reliably attracted to light and the species does not eat during the adult phase of its life cycle.

As well as finding a method of monitoring adult numbers, Harvey also needed a way to detect larvae, which live underground. Hand searching is likely to destroy their habitats, so instead the team used tiny microphones to pick up the sounds – known as stridulation – the larvae make, together with so-called diffusive samplers to detect a chemical (longifolene) they emit.

Harvey says: “Sampling subterranean insects without destroying the larval habitat is notoriously difficult. These diffusive samplers are widely used to monitor environmental pollution, but this is the first time they have been used for insect detection. Because longifolene can be produced by plants, we used it together with sound recording to come up with a more accurate method of finding stag beetle larvae.”

The team found that stridulation patterns produced by stag beetle larvae are very different from other species likely to live nearby, such as the rose chafer (Cetonia aurata) and the lesser stag beetle (Dorcus parallelipipedus). “Stridulation is likely to be a form of communication between larvae; it increases if larvae are handled or placed in solitary confinement,” Harvey says.

These are the first ever sound recordings of lesser stag beetle and rose chafer larvae. The latter sound like squeaky shoes.

The new methods could help conserve other rare species.  According to Harvey: “Acoustic detection of insects as a sampling method is very underused, but we believe it could have great potential in detecting larvae in the field.”

The study was funded by the British Ecological Society, the Forestry Commission, the People's Trust for Endangered Species and the Suffolk Naturalists' Society.

Alan Gange, Deborah Harvey, Colin Hawes, Paul Finch, David Chesmore and Ian Farr. Development of non-invasive monitoring methods for larvae and adults of the stag beetle, Lucanus cervus, Insect Conservation and Diversity, doi: 10.1111/j.1752-4598.2009.00072.x, is published online on  Monday 10 January 2011.

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Notes for editors

1. For further information please contact Dr Deborah Harvey, Royal Holloway, University of London, tel: 01372 801128, mob: 07740 858902, email: deborahjharvey@btopenworld.com.

2. Copies of the paper, images and audio clips of the larvae are available from Becky Allen, British Ecological Society Press Officer, tel: +44 (0)1223 570016, mob: +44 (0)7949 804317, email: beckyallen@ntlworld.com.

3. At up to 7cm long, male stag beetles are an impressive sight. They have enlarged jaws (mandibles) resembling stags' antlers; these are used not for eating – the insect does not feed during the adult phase of its life cycle – but in courtship battles with other males and for restraining females during mating.

The stag beetle (Lucanus cervus) is classified as nationally scarce in the UK. Rare or extinct the the Midlands, northern England and Wales, it is restricted to sites in southern England, occurring in a broad area south-east of a line from southern Suffolk, through Hertfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Hampshire to Dorset, with a particular concentration around the London Basin, and with outlying populations in the West Country, south Wales, and Worcestershire/Gloucestershire border area. Successive national surveys show its range in Britain has declined. It occurs in mainland Europe but evidence suggests that there too its range is declining, and it has become extinct in Denmark.

4. Insect Conservation and Diversity is published by Wiley InterScience. Contents lists are available at www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118902567/home.

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