They are classified as the
strongest insects in the world. They can lift 1,141 times their own body
weight. This is equivalent to a normal man pulling six double decker buses,
each of them full of people.
They are a modern group as
their fossils date back to 30 million years ago and as of now there are more
than 7000 species worldwide.
They range in size from less
than a millimeter to six centimetres or a little more. And they occur rather
extensively in all the continents except Antartica.
They are the Dung beetles and
India
has hundreds of such species. Nagarhole in Karnataka alone had nearly a hundred
of these Dung beetles.
The Dung beetles found include Catharsius granulatus, Copris indicus, Oniticellus cinctus,
Onitis singhalensis, Onthophagus beesoni, Onthophagus ensifer,
Onthophagus ranam, Onthophagus sp.107, Onthophagus tarandus, Picnopanaleus
rotundus, Caccobius diminutives, Caccobius ultor, Copris furciceps, Copris sp,
Heliocopris dominus, Pseudonthophagus sp, Sisyphus neglectus, Caccobius
inermis, Caccobius meridionalis., Caccobius torticornis, Caccobius sp, Copris
sodalist, Onthophagus socialis, Onthophagus sp.301, Onitis phelemon,
Onthophagus furcillifer, Caccobius gallinus, Onthophagus rufulgens, Onthophagus
sp, Copris repertus, Pseudonthophagus sp.1, Copris davisoni, Onitis falcatus,
Onthophagus turbatus, Copris imitans, Onthophagus quadridentatus, Caccobius
vulcanus, Liatongus affinis, Oniticellus spinipes, Sisyphus longipus,
Onthophagus dama and many others.
The Dung beetles live anywhere
from three to five years. A researcher has found that a small 1.5 kilograms pile
of Elephant dung on the African Savannah attracted 16 000 Dung beetles, who
between them had eaten and or buried that dung completely in just two hours.
Research has also shown that
one dung beetle can bury 250 times its own weight in a night. Most of the Dung
beetles prefer herbivore dung, though many are not very particular and will use
many different forms of dung,
Some species have a definite
preference for one type of dung only.
Onthophagus caenobita has
only ever been found feeding in human faeces. Similarly, the Zonocopris
gibbicolis of South America feeds on the
faeces of large snails on whom it rides around.
The female dung beetle lays a
single egg into each ball of dung and then covers the nest with more dung and
soil. When the eggs hatch, the larvae feed on the fecal matter.
Dung beetles can be divided
into three groups: Rollers, Tunnellers and Dwellers. Rollers make a burrow some
way away from the dung they are going to use and then collect small to medium
sized lumps of dung to roll into their burrows. Typhaeus typhoeus, the Minotaur
Beetle, can dig burrows up to a metre deep. Generally the female does most of
the digging and the male spends most of his time foraging for dung and collecting
it for her.
Rollers dig their front legs
into the ground and use their hind legs to push the ball of dung. Tunnellers
fly until they find some fecal matter into which they straightaway dive. They then
dig a tunnel and then drag as much dung as they like down into it. Again it is
mostly the female who stays in the burrow sorting out the dung and the male
goes out to get it.
Some dung beetles eat and lay
their eggs on dung some other beetle has collected. This thief beetle often eats
the legitimate dung-owners eggs apart from taking away or stealing their dung.
The females of many of the
larger ‘Rollers’ stay inside their burrows and care for and protect their eggs
and young. They can live for up to three years. Some of these larger dung beetles
can move balls of dung (on the ground ofcourse) up to 50 times their own weight.
Not many know that Australia
imported 45 species of dung beetle from various parts of the world to get rid
of cattle dung.
In ancient Egypt the dung
beetle was called Scarab and it was an important religious symbol. In some
Indian tribes from South America , a dung
beetle named Aksak is supposed to have modelled the first man and woman from
clay.
Are dung beetles important to
evolution. What is likely to happen if they are not there in the world. Without
dung beetles, the Earth would be piled high with manure and dung.
The dung beetles feed on dung and they spend quiet a time in a
day eating faeces. They are, therefore, called as Dung beetles.
Since they spend their days
eating faeces, their dungrolling led the ancient Egyptians to believe they were
responsible for keeping the sun moving.
More than a hundred species
of dung beetles can be found in the Nagarahole
(Rajiv Gandhi) National Park, which is ranked among the richest biodiversity
spots in the country.
The Heliocopris Dominus is the biggest dung
beetle in the country and it was generally found in the north-eastern region.
This species too is found in Nagarhole.
Watching the dung beetle is as
fascinating as it can be. Want to check it. Then head for Nagarhole. You are
sure to come across them wherever you find dung. And Nagarhole is home to one
of the largest elephant herds in
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