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Ecological and zoogeographical structure of the communities of the endangered and protected Carabus hungaricus Fabricius, 1792 (Coleoptera: Carabidae), in Bulgaria
* 1 , 2
1  Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research (IBER), Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (BAS)
2  University of Forestry, Faculty of Forestry, Department of Hunting and Game Management, 10 Kliment Ohridski Blvd., 1756 Sofia, Bulgaria
Academic Editor: António Soares

Abstract:

The endangered ground beetle Carabus hungaricus Fabricius, 1792 (Coleoptera: Carabidae), is protected in Bulgaria, but little is known about its ecological and zoogeographical features, and this study aimed at clarifying these aspects of its communities. With 252 pitfall traps, in the period May 2021–December 2023, we surveyed 42 sample plots in central-western Bulgaria. Carabus hungaricus was established in only seven of them, with a total of 198 specimens. In these sites, we found 57 species from 23 genera. The beetles belonged to 18 categories from the five main faunal types of Bulgarian carabids. The European–Asiatic complex prevailed (17 species, 30%), followed by the Northern Holarctic European–Siberian (15 species) and Mediterranean complexes (12 species). The European complex consisted of nine species (16%). The Endemic complex was only represented by two Balkan endemics and two Balkan subendemics. Most represented were the European–Neareastern (17.5%), Palaearctic and European–Central Asian (10.5% each) elements. The two classes of life forms had almost equal proportions, namely, 28 (49.1%) Zoophagous and 29 (50.9%) Mixophytophagous species, which is extraordinary for Bulgaria, but typical for the steppe zone of Eurasia. Such predominance of the mixophytophages (even weak) has never been established in Bulgaria. Macropterous were 32 species (56%), brachypterous (hind wings shorter than elytra, or missing) were 14 species (25%), and di(poly)morphic (some individuals with fully developed, others with vestigial wings) were 11 species (19%). The relatively low number of winged species is comparable only with typical montane habitats. In relation to their humidity preferences, mesoxerophilous carabids had the largest share (25 species, 44%). Mesophilous were 15 species and 6 species were eurybiontic. Xerophilous and mesohygrophilous groups included five species each. Hygrophilous was only one species. In relation to its ground beetle fauna, the studied complex of habitats is quite remarkable for Bulgaria and appears to be stable and characteristic for the steppe biome.

Keywords: Carabus hungaricus; central-western Bulgaria; zoogeography; ecology; ground beetles; life forms; steppe refugium; wing morphology
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