> Dung Beetles: How Deep Digging Keeps Eggs Cool

Elizabeth Pennisi 2026-02-04 16:00:00

In the‌ face of global warming,⁢ some⁣ dung beetles may already‍ have a survival strategy.

As temperatures rise, temperate ‍rainbow scarabs bury their dung deeper, keeping developing ⁣young inside dung cool ‌enough to‌ survive, ecologist Kimberly Sheldon reported January​ 6 at a meeting of the Society for Integrative‍ and Comparative Biology in Portland, Ore. Preliminary ⁣field ‌experiments show that ⁣their tropical cousins lack ​this ‌behavioral flexibility‍ and thus might potentially be ⁤more⁢ vulnerable to climate change.

Rainbow scarabs (Phanaeus vindex) are a type of tunneling dung ⁣beetle. Rather than‌ roll gigantic dung⁣ balls along the​ ground as ‌incubators for their young, these grape-sized beetles ⁣dig tunnels and carry dung below‍ ground before‌ shaping it into a hard⁣ ball⁤ and laying one egg inside.

miniature “greenhouses” like this one⁢ let ⁣researchers ⁣see if rainbow scarabs changed their burrowing behavior as⁣ temperatures rose.Kimberly S. Sheldon

To​ see whether rainbow scarabs ​ever take advantage of cooler, more stable temperatures deeper down,​ Sheldon and her ​team placed “greenhouses” — plastic cones with a hole at the tip — over buried buckets filled with soil ⁣in a field. The cones concentrated the sun’s warmth, ​raising the temperature inside about 2 degrees Celsius above ⁢ambient. Beetles under ⁣cones were warmer than ⁢those in buckets without cones but, thanks to the hole, still experienced weather fluctuations.

Sheldon — of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville — began this work more than six⁢ years ago. She had previously found that, compared with dung beetles‌ not living under greenhouses, the females⁣ buried their eggs an average of five centimeters deeper — about 21 ​centimeters from the surface, lowering the incubating temperature ⁢about 1 ⁣degree. But because floods destroyed the study site,she didn’t no⁢ if the behavior ‌helped the insects‌ survive.

In 2023, her⁣ team repeated the experiment. Despite the heat, just as many young emerged​ as adults from⁤ the deeper dung balls as young buried less deep in the cooler buckets, Sheldon reported at⁤ the meeting.

Others⁤ have discovered⁢ that some sweat bees and⁤ tree frogs may be coping with climate‌ change by changing⁣ their behavior. But not all animals seem so predisposed, not even close relatives ⁢of this beetle. In similar experiments, Sheldon’s team tested⁤ a tropical cousin (Oyxternon silenus) ⁤in Ecuador. These beetles did not change​ the depth of their⁣ dung balls⁤ despite the simulated global warming.It’s not yet clear if, or how,⁤ that affected the eggs.

Tropical climates tend to be​ less variable ‌than temperate ones,⁣ which means ther’s been no evolutionary pressure on this beetle to be flexible. So their⁤ ability to beat the heat “is concerning,” Sheldon says.

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