Promoting Dung Beetles on the Range

May 30, 2017
By
Adam Varenhorst,
Patrick Wagner,
Amanda Bachmann
 
Cattle production on rangelands is a very important industry in much of the country. To support this industry, it is essential that our rangelands are well cared for. A key contributor of maintaining a healthy rangeland is the presence of a healthy insect community. This community consists of many beneficial insects including pollinators, predators, and decomposers. One of the most influential of these beneficial insects are the dung beetles.
 
Promoting Dung Beetles on the Range
Figure 1. Dung beetles rolling a ball of dung to a nesting site
 
Benefits of dung beetle activity
 
Dung beetles are coprophagous (i.e., dung-feeding) insects that play a vital role in the decomposition process of animal waste. Dung beetles help regulate rangeland health through dung dispersal. They work to rapidly remove dung from the surface and bury it underground to feed their offspring (Figure 1). By burying dung, the beetles contribute to increasing organic matter content and overall soil fertility. These nutrient pulses become available to grassland vegetation, which helps to boost forage production. Breaking down dung piles also assists with the suppression of dung-breeding livestock pests. These pests include flies, parasitic nematodes, and protozoa that can infest or prey upon livestock, which eventually results in economic losses. Through their daily activity, dung beetles help speed up dung decomposition and disrupt the life cycles of any developing pests (Figure 2).
 
Promoting Dung Beetles on the Range
 
Figure 2. Dung beetles burrowing through a fresh dung pile (near Quinn, SD). Photo courtesy of Pat Guptill.
 
Promoting dung beetles
 
Supporting healthy dung beetle populations on rangeland comes down to management. In terms of grazing management, certain grazing practices can help promote dung beetles. Rotational grazing has been shown to favor dung beetle abundance as well as species diversity. Grazing cattle at higher stocking densities increases the concentration and dispersal of dung piles, which is very influential for attracting dung beetles.
 
Another factor affecting dung beetles is the non-target impacts from treating pasture and livestock pests with insecticides.
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