Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 94

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 94
VÉRONIQUE FORBES, ALLISON BAIN, GUÐRÚN ALDA GÍSLADÓTTIR AND KAREN B. MILEK all kinds of habitats that contain decaying organic matter including dung and com- post. They are often predacious on other invertebrates or are mycetophagous, feeding on moss or fungi (Arnett Jr. & Thomas 2001, 276; Bousquet 1990, 177). Twenty-eight specimens from the genus Philonthus were identifíed. Their habitats include litter, wet moss, carrion, nests and middens (Amett Jr. & Thomas 2001, 393). Quedius mesomelinus is often found in farm buildings like cellars, sta- bles, as well as in stores (Campbell el al. 1989, 580; Smetana 1971, 78). In Iceland, this species is generally synan- thropic (associated with environments made by humans) and is often found in hay, turf and dung (Larsson & Gígja 1959, 90-91). The genus Omalium lives either in association with humans, in birds’ nests or in seaweed accumulated on marine littorals, where they hunt for prey (Arnett Jr. & Thomas 2001, 337). Omalium excavatum, also found in the Vatnstjörður samples, is the most com- mon species of this genus in Iceland (Larsson & Gígja 1959: 64). Both Lesteva longoelytrata and Tachinus cor- ticinus prefer wet habitats within and out- side of buildings (Gudleifsson 2005; Larsson & Gígja 1959). Specimens from the subfamily Aleocharinae, which is dif- ficult to identify below the level of sub- family, were numerous in these archaeoentomological assemblages. These all feed on decaying organic mat- ter. The genus Stenus consists of special- ized predator species that feed on springtails and other arthropods (Amett Jr. & Thomas 2001: 381). In Iceland Stenus lives in cultivated fields, sea coasts, lakes and river shores, wooden areas, bogs and old hay (Larsson & Gígja 1959, 75-80). Members of the genus Cercyon, from the family Hydrophilidae, are also associ- ated with organic matter such as manure and decaying plant material. Some of them are found near the marine littoral in Iceland, and are more or less dependent on the presence of human activity, notably the herding of large mammals (Larsson & Gígja 1959, 122-127). The outdoor fauna One species of tme bug (order Hemiptera) was identified in the assem- blage from Vatnsfjörður, and it belongs to the outdoor fauna. This was Nysius eri- cae, a species belonging to the family Lygaeidae. Members of this genus feed mainly on plant seeds and are able to fly relatively long distances (Judd & Hodkinson 1998, 227). In Iceland, this species prefers sandy and dry environ- ments (Erling Ólafsson, personal com- munication, 2009). Members of the Carabidae family (ground beetles) may be predators or scavengers, polyphagous or hygrophilous (adapted to a damp environment), and often live in a wide variety of habitats (Arnett Jr. & Thomas 2001, 35-36). Nebria rufescens is distributed through- out the whole of Iceland, in diverse habi- tats, except very wet soils and in mountainous heaths (Larsson & Gígja 1959, 14-15). Notiophilus aquaticus, Calathus melanocephalus and Amara quenseli were also present. In Iceland, they are found in relatively dry biotopes, preferring open environments with sparse 92
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