Dung Beetles Navigate by the Moon, Study Says
Out on the African savanna, a fresh and moist pile of fine-grained antelope dung is a nutritious treasure aggressively fought over by a melee of critters. The spoils go to those with the craftiest strategies to snatch and stash a piece of the pie.
To gain an edge in this battle for the poop, the African dung beetle Scarabaeus zambesianus orients itself by the polarized light pattern cast by the moon to make a straight, nighttime escape with its morsel, according to Marie Dacke, a biologist at the University of Lund in Sweden.
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Many creatures are known to use the polarization pattern of sunlight to navigate, but S. zambesianus is the first animal known to use the million-times dimmer polarization of moonlight, Dacke and colleagues report in the July 3 issue of Nature.
Bruce Gill, an entomologist and dung beetle expert at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency in Ottawa, was at first surprised by this beetle's behavior, but upon reflection he said it makes sense because light from the moon was simply reflected sunlight, and many insects that are active during the day are known to navigate by polarized light from the sun.