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TRUE DUNG BEETLES
SCARABAEIDAE: SCARABAEINAE
T
he true dung beetles, or scarab dung beetles,
(subfamily Scarabaeinae) have a short fossil
history. The oldest unquestioned fossil is Eocene,
53 million years old, well into the Age of
Mammals. An association with mammal dung
remains today, and they are essential decomposers
in terrestrial ecosystems, clearing up the waste
products of both wild and domestic animals. Every
egg laid by a true dung beetle is accompanied by a
large ball of dung, enough to provide for the larva’s
whole development, so a great quantity of dung is
removed and buried by these industrious insects.
True dung beetles are divided into “rollers,”
which mold the dung into a ball and roll it
away from competitors before burying it,
and “tunnelers,” which dig a burial
shaft directly under the dung pile.
Especially in South America,
where much of the “megafauna”
(such as giant ground sloths and
elephant-like gomphotheres) is
extinct, many true dung beetles feed
and breed on carrion. These include
most of the brightly colored “rainbow
scarabs” of the tribe Phanaeini. The largest
scarabaeines are the genus Heliocopris, more than
2 in (5 cm) long, tunnelers often found around
elephants and rhinoceroses, where these producers
of large-enough dung piles still exist in the tropics
of Africa and Asia. Most dung beetles are powerful
fliers to move from one dung pile to the next, but
in some parts of Africa flightless dung beetles such
as the genus Mnematium can be found. The vast
ruminant herds of the African plains allow them
to walk between dung piles.
SCARABAEIDAE: SCARABAEINAE
subfamily
Scarabaeinae
known species
6,000+
distribution
Worldwide, most diverse in tropics and
subtropics, much rarer in northern and
southern climates (e.g. few species in
Canada, UK, Chile, New Zealand)
habitat
Many species live in grasslands and
savannahs with big herds of grazing
vertebrates. Tropical forests are rich
in smaller species, and some perch on
leaves in the canopy waiting for dung
size
2–55 mm
diet
Most species develop and feed on
vertebrate dung. Several species,