NZ Dairy Exporter August 2021

Page 79

ENVIRONMENT DUNG BEETLES

What dung beetles do Words by: Elaine Fisher

D

ung beetles – the janitors of farmland, perform many beneficial functions for farmers, as a result of their own quest for food and reproduction. Beetle tunnelling leads to increased aeration of the soil allowing better water penetration. Tunnelling and dung burial also result in increased grass root growth and biological activity in soils under and adjacent to dung pats. Dung beetle activity, therefore, leads to reduced run-off of rainfall and better retention of dung and urine in the soil. This, in turn, results in reduced microbial contamination in runoff, less leachate pollution and reduced eutrophication of our freshwater. Stock will not graze around dung pats unless forced to by high stocking rates or having restricted access to pasture. Dung burial by beetles enhances grass growth through nutrient recycling, improved soil structure, and increases the amount of pasture available, improving long-term sustainable productivity. Dung beetle activity reduces reinfection of livestock by parasitic worms. This is achieved by dung beetles directly or indirectly killing the eggs and young larvae of the parasitic worms. They do this in several ways. Firstly, the dung pat dries out faster as it is broken up by dung beetles – this kills parasite eggs and larvae faster than in dung pats without beetles. Secondly, the processing of dung into brood balls by the adult beetles and direct feeding by dung beetles and their larvae kill parasite eggs and larvae. Thirdly, deep burial of dung reduces vertical migration by parasite larvae back up to the soil surface.

DEATH TO THE FLIES

Blowflies associated with sheep flystrike do not breed in animal dung but females use it as the nutrient resource for maturing

eggs. In New Zealand, other nuisance flies such as biting stable flies, house flies, and flesh flies are known to breed in livestock dung. When dung burying beetles and dung breeding flies compete in dung, the beetles win. Survivorship of fly eggs and larvae is significantly reduced by rapid conversion of the dung resource and mechanical damage during dung manipulation by the beetles. Many laboratory and field experiments confirm significant reductions in the numbers of dung breeding pest flies because of dung beetles. The burial of animal dung and improved infiltration of urine into topsoil will likely reduce the production of methane and nitrous oxide, and is therefore likely to decrease the emission of greenhouse gases associated with animal waste. While adequate quantification of the influence of dung beetle activity on nitrogen emissions remains to be done, some studies have shown dung beetle activity during feeding and nesting will stimulate aerobic conditions, altering the microorganism fauna in dung pats, brood balls, and associated soils to reduce methane production. And when compared to unburied dung, the speed at which freshly

Dairy Exporter | www.nzfarmlife.co.nz | August 2021

deposited dung is buried by moderate to high numbers of dung beetles is also likely to reduce methane production. Economic benefits from dung beetle activity will arise from enhanced forage palatability, nutrient recycling, and a reduction in pasture pests (nuisance flies and livestock parasites). Dung beetles are a long term 10-year investment. This is due to a combination of it taking time before beetles reach a farm’s full carry capacity and changes in soil chemical and physical structure is a slow process. Based on a pasture response, and therefore higher milk or meat production, there is a positive Net Present Value and an internal rate of return of over 18%. From a national perspective, conservative estimates from the US suggest that by burying cattle dung alone, dung beetles are worth approximately US$380 million annually to the US economy. In Australia dung beetles are worth a billion dollars a year to their economy. Primarily that’s because they contribute to carbon sequestration, mineral and nutrient recycling, and also the important value they have in reducing the pest burden. • Source: dungbeetles.co.nz/benefits 79


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Articles inside

The Dairy Exporter in 1971

3min
pages 106-108

Tech comes to the farm

6min
pages 102-103

Running away from grief

6min
pages 100-101

Whakapapa win inspires finalist

5min
pages 96-97

Nitrogen system trial drawing to a close

2min
pages 98-99

Vet Voice: Diagnosing your down cow

5min
pages 91-93

Oyster season in beef land

12min
pages 86-90

Bobby calves an emotive but profitable product

6min
pages 84-85

Big idea leads to native plantings

4min
pages 82-83

What dung beetles do

3min
page 79

Combating milk fever with diet changes

5min
pages 70-72

Fortify supplement with P

2min
pages 74-75

Don’t let cows go hypo

1min
page 73

Cows energised on winter diets

4min
pages 68-69

Efficiency from amazing maize

9min
pages 62-65

Feeding the cow and the rumen

5min
pages 66-67

Transition management

5min
pages 60-61

Feed tactics win the profit battle

9min
pages 56-59

An alternative pasture solution

7min
pages 52-55

All hail hay bale grazing

7min
pages 46-49

Torunui farm on emissions reduction path

9min
pages 42-45

Fodder beet pulling nitrogen out of the soil

7min
pages 50-51

Sustainable farming sparks excitement

12min
pages 34-38

SIDE: Cost control and the five ‘nahs’

5min
pages 39-41

Focus on your workers during busy times

2min
page 33

Resilience shines over West Coast flooded waters

6min
pages 30-32

‘Pure magic’ making raw milk cheese

9min
pages 26-29

Sustainable sourcing the trend for dairying

2min
pages 23-24

The opportunity of alternative proteins

9min
pages 14-17

Ireland has developed a Grass-Fed Standard. What are the ramifications for NZ?

2min
page 22

How Brazil combined intensive land use with rainforest protection

7min
pages 18-21

Richard Reynolds reflects on a great SIDE conference

3min
pages 12-13

Trish Rankin ponders why farming is so hard right now

3min
page 11

Say G’day to NZ Dairy Exporter’s new contributor Hamish Hammond

3min
page 10

China’s demand for dairy speeds up

4min
page 25
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