WEBVTT 00:00:07.235 --> 00:00:11.185 Somewhere near you, an animal is defecating. 00:00:11.185 --> 00:00:15.576 In fact, each day, the animal kingdom produces roughly enough dung 00:00:15.576 --> 00:00:21.566 to match the volume of water pouring over the Victoria Falls. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:21.566 --> 00:00:24.934 So why isn’t the planet covered in the stuff? 00:00:24.934 --> 00:00:29.244 You can thank the humble dung beetle for eating up the excess. 00:00:29.244 --> 00:00:34.568 Capable of burying 250 times their body weight in a single night, 00:00:34.568 --> 00:00:40.253 these valiant insects make quick work of an endless stream of feces. 00:00:40.253 --> 00:00:46.065 Over 7,000 known species of dung beetle run clean-up duty across six continents 00:00:46.065 --> 00:00:48.785 —everywhere except Antarctica. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:48.785 --> 00:00:51.924 A dung beetle’s first task is to locate dung. 00:00:51.924 --> 00:00:54.954 Some live on the anal regions of larger animals, 00:00:54.954 --> 00:00:57.493 ready to leap off when they defecate. 00:00:57.493 --> 00:01:01.986 Others sniff out feces that animals leave behind. 00:01:01.986 --> 00:01:07.055 A pile of elephant dung can attract 4,000 beetles in 15 minutes. 00:01:07.055 --> 00:01:08.868 So once a beetle finds dung, 00:01:08.868 --> 00:01:12.964 it must work quickly to secure some of the bounty for itself. 00:01:12.964 --> 00:01:16.935 Most dung beetle species fall into one of three main groups: 00:01:16.935 --> 00:01:17.878 rollers, 00:01:17.878 --> 00:01:18.749 tunnelers, 00:01:18.749 --> 00:01:21.254 and dwellers. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:21.254 --> 00:01:25.253 Dung rollers sculpt a ball of dung, and using their back legs, 00:01:25.253 --> 00:01:28.447 quickly roll it away from competitors. 00:01:28.447 --> 00:01:30.434 Potential partners jump on the ball, 00:01:30.434 --> 00:01:32.975 and once the ball-maker has selected their mate, 00:01:32.975 --> 00:01:36.375 the pair dig their dung ball into the soil. 00:01:36.375 --> 00:01:41.614 Once it’s been buried, the female lays a single egg within the dung ball. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:41.614 --> 00:01:43.654 Tunnelers have a different approach. 00:01:43.654 --> 00:01:47.536 Digging underneath a pat, some drag dung down into the soil 00:01:47.536 --> 00:01:50.896 and pack it into clumps known as brood balls, 00:01:50.896 --> 00:01:52.004 dung balls, 00:01:52.004 --> 00:01:56.305 or dung “sausages,” depending on their shape and size. 00:01:56.305 --> 00:02:00.205 Male tunnelers sport a spectacular array of horns 00:02:00.205 --> 00:02:02.595 to fight each other for control of these tunnels, 00:02:02.595 --> 00:02:06.770 which they then defend until the female’s laid her egg. 00:02:06.770 --> 00:02:12.027 Some male tunnelers avoid the fray by masquerading as hornless females 00:02:12.027 --> 00:02:16.795 and sneaking into tunnels to mate while the guardians’ heads are turned. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:16.795 --> 00:02:19.355 The third group of dung beetles, dwellers, 00:02:19.355 --> 00:02:21.634 take the most straightforward approach, 00:02:21.634 --> 00:02:25.135 laying their eggs directly into a dung pat. 00:02:25.135 --> 00:02:28.016 This makes their offspring more vulnerable to predation 00:02:28.016 --> 00:02:30.645 than those of the tunnelers and rollers. 00:02:30.645 --> 00:02:34.084 As the larvae feed, they riddle the dung pat with tunnels, 00:02:34.084 --> 00:02:39.754 leaving remains that are quickly colonized by bacteria and fungi and weathered away. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:39.754 --> 00:02:43.896 Inside a tunnel, ball, or pat, once the larvae hatch, 00:02:43.896 --> 00:02:47.514 they consume the dung before metamorphosing into a pupa 00:02:47.514 --> 00:02:50.295 and then an adult beetle. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:50.295 --> 00:02:53.375 Besides clearing dung, the actions of these beetles 00:02:53.375 --> 00:02:56.666 have considerable ecological importance. 00:02:56.666 --> 00:03:00.625 For one, they serve as secondary seed dispersers. 00:03:00.625 --> 00:03:02.035 Dung from monkeys, 00:03:02.035 --> 00:03:02.894 wild pigs, 00:03:02.894 --> 00:03:06.744 and other animals is riddled with seeds from the fruits they eat. 00:03:06.744 --> 00:03:08.875 When beetles bury their dung balls, 00:03:08.875 --> 00:03:12.004 they inadvertently protect these seeds from predators 00:03:12.004 --> 00:03:15.086 and increase the likelihood they’ll germinate. 00:03:15.086 --> 00:03:18.494 The advantage is so great that one South African plant 00:03:18.494 --> 00:03:22.844 has evolved to produce seeds that look and smell like dung 00:03:22.844 --> 00:03:25.873 to trick beetles into burying them. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:25.873 --> 00:03:30.156 Dung beetles also play important roles in agricultural systems. 00:03:30.156 --> 00:03:34.004 Livestock, like cows and sheep, produce huge amounts of dung, 00:03:34.004 --> 00:03:37.645 which contains nutrients that can benefit plants. 00:03:37.645 --> 00:03:41.525 The beetles break up the dung and tunnel it deep into the soil, 00:03:41.525 --> 00:03:45.825 bringing the nutrients into close contact with plant roots. 00:03:45.825 --> 00:03:51.767 Their services to farmers have been valued at $380 million a year in the US 00:03:51.767 --> 00:03:56.094 and £367 million a year in the UK. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:56.094 --> 00:03:59.196 Dung beetles can even help us battle global warming 00:03:59.196 --> 00:04:03.476 by reducing greenhouse gas emissions associated with farming. 00:04:03.476 --> 00:04:06.796 Microbes living in oxygen-poor livestock dung 00:04:06.796 --> 00:04:10.685 produce methane, a potent greenhouse gas. 00:04:10.685 --> 00:04:14.175 But beetles oxygenate pats when they tunnel into them, 00:04:14.175 --> 00:04:17.624 preventing the microbes from producing methane. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:17.624 --> 00:04:19.525 The dung beetle spreads seeds, 00:04:19.525 --> 00:04:20.594 helps farmers, 00:04:20.594 --> 00:04:22.435 and fights climate change 00:04:22.435 --> 00:04:26.675 —and accomplishes it all simply by doing its business. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:26.675 --> 00:04:30.465 Maybe next time you come across some dung in the forest or a field, 00:04:30.465 --> 00:04:32.945 you’ll be tempted to take a closer look.