Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Qupperneq 96

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Qupperneq 96
VÉRONIQUE FORBES, ALLISON BAIN, GUÐRÚN ALDA GÍSLADÓTTIR AND KAREN B. MILEK Cellar samples yielded as many as 385 individuals of the species Tipnus unicol- or (Fig. 6). In Iceland, this species is pri- marily a synanthrope, but it is rather rare in modem contexts and is generally found in ancient buildings (Erling Ólafs- son, personal communication, 2008). It seems to prefer drier conditions provided by human habitats rather than barns, byres or sheds, even though it can also be encountered there (Buckland et al. 1991, 139). It also favours cooler temperatures than other spider beetles species to com- plete its development, i.e. between 17.5 and 20°C. (Howe 1955). The adults feed on flour, bread, cereals, dead insects and dung from small rodents and humans. Elsewhere in Europe, T. unicolor is also present in buildings, especially in mouldy and damp situations though not in obvi- ously wet or rotten material (O’Farrell & Butler 1948, 361), while its larva are often found in bird and rodent excre- ments or in damp and decaying vegeta- tion, including wood (Howe 1955; Larsson & Gígja 1959, 165-167). Only one Ptinus tectus was found (fíg.6). According to Larsson & Gígja (1959, 169), this species is likely to be found in dried fish and mutton in Iceland, though it can also feed on other vegetal and ani- mal matter. In Canada it has also been taken on poultry and bran (Campbell et al. 1989, 332-334), while in Greenland, it has been discovered inside leather goods in stores and stables (Böcher 1988,49). Sitophilus oryzae or the rice weevil is an important pest of grain stores, capable of causing serious damage to wheat, rice, com, rye, barley, buckwheat, sorghum and other cereals and their by-products Figure 6. Left: head and pronotum o/Ptinus tectus, right: head and pronotum o/Tipnus unicolor. Found in S-510. (Bousquet 1990, 100-101; Campbell etal. 1989,227). As this species originates from subtropical regions, it requires tempera- tures higher than 10°C to complete its life cycle, while 25-33 °C represents the opti- mal range of temperatures (Nakakita & Ikenaga 1997). For this reason, in Iceland the species lives in stored grains and is therefore exclusively synanthropic. The dungfeeders The family Scarabaeidae is represented by four specimens of Aphodius lappon- um, a common dung beetle in Iceland, which feeds on the dung of large mam- mals. As Iceland lacks an indigenous large land mammal fauna, it is associated with the dung of domesticated animals in stables and cultivated fields. It has been found in human excrement, but since it seems to prefer dung with abundant fíbrous material (Osbome 1983, 459), it is unknown whether this species can breed in human or other non-herbivorous mammals, such as dogs and cats (Larsson & Gígja 1959, 128). One single individual of the species Creophillus maxillosus was found in cel- lar 7503. This rove beetle normally lives in carrion where it feeds on maggots, bee- 94
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Archaeologia Islandica

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