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Hot feet and cool heads — reasons for dung beetles to dance | Marcus Byrne |TEDxWitsUniversity

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    This is poo.
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    And what I want to do today
    is share my passion for poo with you.
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    What you might find more fascinating
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    is the way these small animals
    deal with poo.
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    So this animal here
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    has a brain about the size
    of a grain of rice.
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    And yet, it can do things
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    you and I couldn't possibly entertain
    the idea of doing.
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    Basically, it all evolved to handle
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    its food source which is dung.
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    So the question is,
    "Where do we start this story?"
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    It seems appropriate to start at the end
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    because this is a waste product
    that comes out of other animals
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    but it still contains nutrients
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    and there are
    sufficient nutrients in there
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    for dung beetles to make a living.
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    So dung beetles eat dung,
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    and their larvae are also dung feeders;
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    they are grown completely
    in a ball of dung.
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    Within South Africa we've got
    about 800 species of dung beetles,
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    in Africa we've got
    2,000 species of dung beetles,
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    and in the world we have about
    6,000 species of dung beetles.
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    So, according to dung beetles,
    dung is pretty good stuff.
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    The question is: "How do
    they deal with this material?"
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    And most dung beetles actually
    wrap it into a package of some sort.
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    It's made into a discrete ball,
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    but most of the time you won't see that
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    unless you're prepared to get
    dung under your fingernails
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    and rout through the dung itself,
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    you'll never see 90%
    of the dung beetle species
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    because they go directly into the dung,
    straight down below it,
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    and then they shuttle back and forth
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    between the dung at the soil's surface
    and the nest they make underground.
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    But fortunately for us,
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    10% of the species actually make a ball.
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    They roll away this ball
    from the dung source
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    and usually bury it at a remote place
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    away from the dung source.
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    They have a very particular behavior
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    by which they are able
    to roll their balls.
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    This is the very proud owner
    of a beautiful dung ball.
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    You can see it's a male
    — he's got hairy legs there.
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    He's clearly very pleased
    about what he's sitting on there.
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    But then he's about to become a victim
    of a vicious smash and grab.
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    (Laughter)
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    This is a clear indication
    that this is a valuable resource.
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    And valuable resources
    have to be looked after,
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    and guarded in a particular way,
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    and we think the reason they roll
    the balls away is because of this:
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    because of the competition
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    that is involved
    in getting hold of that dung.
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    This dung pat was actually
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    — well, it wasn't a dung pat
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    15 minutes before
    this photograph was taken —
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    we think it's the intense competition
    that makes the beetles
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    so well adapted to rolling balls of dung.
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    What you've got to imagine here
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    is this animal moving across
    the African veld.
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    Its head is down, it's walking backwards,
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    it's the most bizarre way to transport
    your food in any particular direction.
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    And, at the same time,
    it has got to deal with the heat.
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    This is Africa. It's hot.
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    So what I want to share with you now
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    are some of the experiments that myself
    and my colleagues have used
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    to investigate how dung beetles
    deal with these problems.
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    So, watch this beetle.
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    There are two things
    I want you to be aware of,
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    the first is how it deals with
    this obstacle we've put in in its way.
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    See, it does a little dance.
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    And then it carries on
    in exactly the same direction
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    that it took in the first place.
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    A little dance,
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    and then heads off
    in a particular direction.
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    So, clearly, this animal
    knows where it's going
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    and it knows where it wants to go.
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    And that's a very important thing,
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    because if you think about it,
    you're at the dung pile,
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    you've got this great big pile
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    that you want to get away
    from everybody else,
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    and the quickest way
    to do it is in a straight line.
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    So we gave them
    some more tasks to deal with.
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    And what we did here,
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    is we turned the world under their feet.
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    And watch its response.
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    So this animal has actually had
    the whole world turned under its feet,
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    it's turned by 90 degrees,
    but it doesn't flinch.
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    It knows exactly where it wants to go
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    and it heads off
    in that particular direction.
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    So, our next question then was:
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    "How are they doing this?
    What are they doing?"
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    And there was a cue
    that was available to us;
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    every now and then,
    they climb on top of the ball
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    and they take a look
    at the world around them.
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    What do you think
    they could be looking at
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    as they climb on top of the ball?
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    What are the obvious cues
    that this animal could use
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    to direct its movement?
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    The most obvious one
    is to look at the sky.
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    So, we thought:
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    "What could they
    be looking at in the sky?"
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    and the obvious thing
    to look at is the sun.
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    A classic experiment here.
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    We moved the sun.
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    So what we're going to do
    now is shade the sun with a board,
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    and then move the sun with a mirror
    to a completely different position.
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    And look at what the beetle does.
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    It does a little double dance.
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    And then it heads back
    in exactly the same direction
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    it went in the first place.
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    (Laughter)
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    It makes up its mind
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    and heads back
    in the opposite direction.
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    So, clearly they're looking at the sun.
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    The sun is a very important cue
    in the sky for them.
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    The thing is the sun
    is not always available to you,
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    because at sunset
    it disappears below the horizon.
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    What is happening in the sky here
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    is that there's a great big pattern
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    of polarized light in the sky
    that you and I can't see.
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    It's the way our eyes are built.
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    But the sun is at the horizon over here,
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    and we know that when the sun
    is at the horizon,
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    — so it's over on this side —
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    there is a north-south,
    huge pathway across the sky
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    of polarized light that we can't see.
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    But the beetles can see it.
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    So, how do we test that?
    Well, that's easy.
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    We get a great big polarization filter,
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    pop the beetle underneath it,
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    and the filter is at right angles
    to the polarization pattern in the sky.
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    The beetles comes out
    from underneath the filter,
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    and it does a right hand turn
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    because it comes back under the sky
    that it was originally orientated to,
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    and then reorientates itself back
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    to the direction
    it was originally going in.
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    Obviously, beetles
    can see polarized light.
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    So, what we've got so far
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    is, "What are beetles doing?"
    — they're rolling balls —
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    "How are they doing it?"
    — they're rolling them in a straight line—
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    "How are they maintaining
    a particular straight line?"
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    — they are looking at
    celestial cues in the sky,
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    some of which you and I can't see.
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    But "How do they pick up
    those celestial cues?"
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    was of interest to us next.
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    And it was
    this particular little behavior,
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    the dance,
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    that we thought was important,
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    because — look!
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    It takes a pause, every now and then,
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    and then heads off in the direction
    that it wants to go in.
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    What are they doing
    when they do this dance?
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    How far can we push them
    before they will reorientate themselves?
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    In this experiment here,
    we forced them into a channel
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    and you can see
    he wasn't particularly forced
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    into this particular channel,
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    and we gradually displaced
    the beetle by 180 degrees
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    until this individual ends up going
    in exactly the wrong direction.
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    It ends up going in exactly
    the opposite direction
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    that it wanted to go to
    in the first place.
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    And let's see what his reaction is,
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    as he is headed through 90 degrees here,
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    and when he ends up down here,
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    he's going to be 180 degrees
    in the wrong direction.
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    And see what its response is.
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    He does a little dance,
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    and turns around and heads back.
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    He knows exactly where he is going,
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    he knows exactly what the problem is,
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    and he knows exactly how to deal with it.
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    And the dance is a transition behavior
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    that allows them
    to reorientate themselves.
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    So, that's the dance.
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    But after spending many years
    sitting in the African bush,
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    watching dung beetles on nice hot days,
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    we noticed that there was another behavior
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    associated with the dance behavior.
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    You'll see it in this video here.
    It's very obvious.
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    Every now and then,
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    when they climb on top of the ball
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    they wipe their face.
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    And you see him do it again.
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    Now what could be going on here?
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    Clearly the ground is very hot.
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    When the ground is hot,
    they dance more often.
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    And when they do this particular dance,
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    they wipe the bottom of their face.
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    We thought that it could be
    a thermoregulatory behavior,
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    maybe what they're doing
    is trying to get off the hot soil
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    and also spitting on their face
    to cool their head down.
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    So we designed a couple of arenas.
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    One was hot, one was cold;
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    we shaded this one, we left that one hot.
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    We were able to swap them around.
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    Then, we filmed them
    with a thermal camera.
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    What you're looking at here,
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    is a heat image of the system.
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    And what you can see here
    emerging from the poo,
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    is a cool dung ball.
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    So the truth is,
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    if you look at the temperature over here,
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    dung is cool.
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    (Laughter)
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    All we're interested in here is comparing
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    the temperature of the beetle
    against the background.
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    The background here is about 50°C.
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    The beetle itself and the ball
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    are probably around 30°C to 35°C.
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    This is a great big ball of icecream
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    that this beetle is now transporting
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    across the hot veld.
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    It isn't climbing, it isn't dancing
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    because its body temperature
    is actually relatively low,
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    it's about the same as yours and mine.
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    What's of interest here,
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    is that its little brain is quite cool.
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    But if we contrast now
    what happens in a hot environment,
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    — and look at this particular beetle,
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    look at the temperature of the soil —
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    it's up around 55°C to 60°C.
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    Watch how often the beetle dances.
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    Look at its front legs.
    They're roaringly hot.
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    The ball leaves a little thermal shadow,
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    and the beetle climbs on top
    of the ball and wipes its face,
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    and all the time it's trying
    to cool itself down, we think,
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    and avoid the hot sand
    that it's walking across.
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    That was pretty interesting.
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    We were interested
    in the temperature of the legs,
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    and what we did then was
    put little boots on these legs,
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    because this was a way to test
    if the legs were involved
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    in sensing the temperature of the soil.
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    If you look over here,
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    with boots, they climb
    onto the ball far less often
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    than when they had no boots on.
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    We described these as cool boots.
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    It was a dental compound
    that we used to make them.
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    We also cooled down the dung ball,
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    so we were able to put
    the ball in the fridge,
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    gave them a nice cool dung ball,
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    and they climbed onto that ball
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    far less often than when
    they had a hot ball.
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    This is called stilting.
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    It's a thermal behavior that you
    and I do when we cross the beach,
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    we jump onto a towel,
    or somebody else's towel,
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    "Sorry! I jumped onto your towel!"
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    then you scuttle across
    on somebody else's towel
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    and that way you don't burn your feet.
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    And that's exactly what
    the beetles are doing here.
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    However, there's one more story
    I'd like to share with you
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    and that's this particular species.
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    It's from a genus called pachysoma,
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    there are 13 species in the genus.
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    They have a particular behavior
    that you will find interesting.
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    This is a dung beetle.
    Watch what he's doing.
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    Can you spot the difference?
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    They don't normally go this slowly.
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    This is in slow motion.
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    But it's walking forward
    and it's dragging a pellet with it,
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    it's taking a pellet
    of dried dung with it.
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    This is a different species
    in the same genus,
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    but it has exactly
    the same foraging behavior.
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    So what's going on here?
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    One more interesting aspect
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    of this dung beetle's behavior
    that we found quite fascinating,
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    and that's it forages
    and provisions a nest.
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    Watch this individual here.
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    What he's trying to do is set up a nest.
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    He doesn't like his first position,
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    but he comes up with a second position,
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    and about 50 minutes later,
    that nest is finished
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    and he heads off
    to forage and provision
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    at a pile of dried dung pellets.
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    Notice the outward path,
    compared to the homeward path.
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    And compare the two.
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    By and large, you'll see
    that the homeward path
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    is far more direct
    than the outward path.
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    On the outward path,
    he's always on the lookout
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    for a new blob of dung.
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    On the way home,
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    — he knows where home is —
    and he wants to go straight there.
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    The important thing here,
    is that this isn't a one way trip.
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    As with most dung beetles,
    the trip here,
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    is repeated back and forth
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    between the provisioning site
    and the nest site.
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    Watch, you're going to see
    another South African crime
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    taking place right now!
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    (Laughter)
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    His neighbor steals
    one of his dung pellets.
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    This is a behavior called
    "path integration."
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    The beetle has a home spot,
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    it goes out on a convoluted path,
    looking for food;
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    when it finds food,
    it heads straight home,
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    it knows exactly where its home is.
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    Now there are two ways
    it could be doing that.
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    We can test what it's doing
    by displacing the beetle
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    to a new position when
    it's at the foraging site.
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    If it's using landmarks,
    it will find its home.
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    If it's using "path integration,"
    it won't find its home,
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    it will arrive at the wrong spot.
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    Here it's using path integration.
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    It's counting its steps,
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    measuring the distance
    out in this direction,
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    it knows the bearing home,
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    it knows it should be in that direction.
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    If you displace it,
    it ends up in the wrong place.
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    Let's see what happens
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    when we put this beetle to the test
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    with a similar experiment.
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    Here's our cunning experimenter.
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    He displaces the beetle,
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    and now we have to see
    what is going to take place.
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    He doesn't like
    that piece. He rejects it.
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    He climbs onto the paper
    and is moved to a new position.
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    Now, what we've got is a burrow.
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    That's where the forage was.
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    The forager has been displaced
    to a new position.
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    If he's using landmark orientation
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    he should be able to find the burrow
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    because he should be able to recognize
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    the landmarks around it.
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    If he's using path integration
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    then it should end up in the wrong spot.
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    Over here.
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    So let's watch what happens
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    when we put the beetle
    through the whole test.
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    So there it is there.
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    He's about to head home,
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    and look what happens.
  • 16:54 - 16:55
    Shame.
  • 16:56 - 16:58
    It hasn't a clue.
  • 16:58 - 17:01
    It starts to search for its house,
  • 17:01 - 17:04
    in the right distance away from the food
  • 17:04 - 17:07
    but it's clearly completely lost.
  • 17:08 - 17:11
    So we know now that this animal
  • 17:11 - 17:14
    uses path integration
    to find its way around.
  • 17:14 - 17:18
    And the callous experimenter
    leaves at top left.
  • 17:18 - 17:21
    So what we're looking at here
  • 17:21 - 17:24
    are a group of animals
    that use a compass,
  • 17:24 - 17:27
    they use the sun as a compass
    to find their way around.
  • 17:27 - 17:32
    They have some sort of system
    for measuring that distance.
  • 17:32 - 17:36
    We know that these species
    here count their steps.
  • 17:36 - 17:39
    That's what they use as an odometer,
  • 17:39 - 17:41
    a step counting system
  • 17:42 - 17:46
    to find their way back home.
  • 17:46 - 17:49
    We don't know yet what dung beetles use.
  • 17:49 - 17:51
    What have we learned from these animals
  • 17:51 - 17:54
    with a brain the size of a grain of rice?
  • 17:54 - 17:59
    Well, we know they can
    roll balls in a straight line
  • 17:59 - 18:01
    using celestial cues.
  • 18:01 - 18:04
    We know that the dance behavior
    is an orientation behaviour,
  • 18:04 - 18:06
    and it's also
    a thermoregulation behavior,
  • 18:06 - 18:11
    and we also know that they use
    a path integration system
  • 18:11 - 18:14
    for finding their way home.
  • 18:14 - 18:15
    So, for a small animal,
  • 18:15 - 18:17
    dealing with a fairly revolting substance,
  • 18:17 - 18:21
    we can actually learn
    an awful lot from these behaviors,
  • 18:21 - 18:24
    doing things that you
    and I couldn't possibly do.
  • 18:24 - 18:26
    Thank you.
  • 18:26 - 18:28
    (Applause)
Title:
Hot feet and cool heads — reasons for dung beetles to dance | Marcus Byrne |TEDxWitsUniversity
Description:

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.
Marcus Byrne's research interests revolve around the use of insects for biological control. His talk unveils some of the secrets of dung beetles survival and adaptation to their environment.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
18:31

English subtitles

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