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Index
Cover Title Page Copyright Page Contents Preface Acknowledgements 1. Introduction – What is Dung?
Paying lip service to food You are what you eat Rights and wrongs of passage The long and the short of it What goes in one end…
2. Cleanliness Is Next to Fastidiousness – The Human Obsession with Sewage
Don’t touch that! No mere flush in the pan Just add water? What goes in must come out A test for purity, or at least potability The yeuch factor
3. Waste Not – Dung as a Human Resource
What will they think of next? Throwing it all away From dung heap to hill of beans Dung worth fighting over
4. It’s Worth Fighting Over – Dung as a Valuable Ecological Resource
The mad scramble for possession First find your dung – and be quick about it Not putting all your eggs in one basket… of dung What is the point of horns? Major and minor leagues — mine’s bigger than yours The downside of having horns Battling the elements too Minority dung uses
5. Dung Communities – Interactions and Conflicts
A model of good dung behaviour Make way for the dung masters Carving up the dung pie – three feeding and nesting strategies Dwellers – at home in the middle of it all Tunnellers – in a hole in the ground there lived a beetle Rollers – divine inspiration was just about right Thievery – possession is nine-tenths of the nest A cuckoo in the nest Predators – who eats whom? Parasites and parasitoids – the enemies within
6. The Evolution of Dung Feeding – Where Did It All Begin?
The great bowel shift A beetle in the nest is worth two in the leaf litter Walking with dinosaur dung? Once a dung beetle, always a dung beetle?
7. A Closer Look – Who Lives In Dung?
Now wash your hands The English scarab – not so sacred An insect to be proud of Flies – the good, the bad and the bugly The not quite so scenic route The mystery of the deep
8. Cross Section of a Dung Pat – A Slice of Coprophagous Life
Swimming in the stuff – soft centres The soil horizon
9. The Ageing Process – Time Line of A Dung Pat
Newly minted, going on mature The well-developed community This place is falling to pieces Very little left now
10. Dung Problems – The End of World Ordure As We Know It
A fly in the bush is a pain in the eye Beetles to the rescue An impending ecological disaster of our own making Megafauna and microfauna extinctions
11. Dung Types – An Identification Guide 12. Dung Inhabitants and Dung Feeders – A Rogues’ Gallery
Diptera – flies Coleoptera – beetles Lepidoptera – butterflies and moths Dictyoptera – termites and cockroaches Hymenoptera – wasps and ants Other invertebrates Other animals
13. Dung Is a Four-Letter Word – A Scatological Dictionary References Index
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