A banquet in the bark
If we were blessed with the superpower of ultrasonic hearing, then a visit to an old wood or pasture with ancient trees would be a whole new experience.
We would be overwhelmed with the sounds of gnawing, nibbling and munching. But this wouldn’t be the noise of someone feasting on the crispy component of their picnic, it would be the cacophony of countless beetles and their larvae consuming rotting and dead wood, ‘the sound of the saproxyles’.
Saproxylic beetles are defined as species dependent on dead or decaying wood, or dependent on those that are dependent on decaying wood for part of their lifecycle.
These invertebrates are mostly dependent on habitats created by the processes of decay or damage in the wood and bark of trees and larger shrubs. These niche habitats include rot holes, sap runs, fungal hyphae and fruiting bodies.
Meet the residents of rot
Naturally rotten neighbourhoods are home to incredibly diverse wildlife communities. So, who lives where? Let’s find out!
The larvae of the majestic stag beetle favour the basement locations of underground deadwood, whilst black and yellow longhorn beetle larvae are long-term tenants of fallen branches, taking up to three years to leave their home as adults.
Fungi that thrive in decaying locations include the delicate stalks of candlesnuff fungus and the chunky chicken of the woods.