130
EARTH-BORING DUNG BEETLES
GEOTRUPIDAE
W
ith fewer than a thousand known species
in the modern fauna, the Geotrupidae
are a relatively small but widespread lineage of
scarabaeoid beetles. They have a long evolutionary
history, found as fossils in Early Cretaceous rocks of
eastern Russia more than 130 million years old; so
they were contemporaries of dinosaurs, and may
even have fed on their dung before the appearance
of more typical dung beetles. The name
“Earth-boring Dung Beetles” is a slight misnomer,
since only one of the three major subfamilies, the
Geotrupinae, is associated with dung. However,
all species bore in the earth.
Geotrupinae includes the familiar Dor Beetles,
or Dumbledores, that fly noisily in the evening in
pastoral farming areas. These were formerly called
“lousy watchmen,” since their dusk flight marked
the beginning of the night-watch, and they are
GEOTRUPIDAE
family
Geotrupidae
known species
920
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica, particularly
abundant in temperate zones
habitat
Geotrupinae often occur in agricultural
settings as well as plains and woodlands,
particularly in both northern and southern
hemisphere temperate zones. Bolboceratinae
are found in plains, deserts, and forests,
including tropical rainforests, and are
abundant in Australia. Lethrinae are sparsely
distributed from the Mediterranean across
Central Asia, in light woodland
size
5–30 mm