In the dense, vibrant ecosystems of the Amazon rainforest, dung beetles play an indispensable ecological role by recycling animal waste and inhibiting the spread of parasites. These insects process faeces, incorporating it into the soil, thereby enriching nutrient cycles crucial for plant growth. Researchers have long appreciated their importance both in European commercial forests and the vast Amazonian landscapes. However, a recent study conducted by a collaborative team from the Universities of Würzburg and Bremen has brought to light alarming evidence that rising temperatures might severely undermine dung beetle populations, posing broader threats to biodiversity and ecosystem functionality.
The study, executed in the Peruvian Amazon, investigated dung beetle communities across a striking elevation range spanning from 250 meters to 3,500 meters above sea level. The researchers’ primary hypothesis centered on unraveling how abiotic factors, especially temperature, influence species diversity and population densities along this Andean-Amazonian gradient. Notably, soil moisture and food availability—though traditionally considered crucial ecological elements—proved to be less significant compared to temperature in determining beetle diversity and abundance.
One of the most striking findings was the pronounced peak in dung beetle diversity and abundance around the altitude of 500 meters. At this elevation, temperatures appear to fall within an optimal physiological window, affording these insects conditions conducive to survival, reproduction, and ecological activity. Intriguingly, as the altitude decreased below 500 meters toward the Amazonian lowlands, researchers observed a precipitous decline in species richness. This counterintuitive result suggests that the warmer temperatures typical of these lower elevations impose heat stress on dung beetles, pushing them past their thermal tolerance limits.
Equally telling was the decline in diversity observed at higher, colder altitudes, where lower temperatures likely constrain beetle metabolism and activity. The combined effect results in a hump-shaped curve of species richness peaking at mid-elevations. This nuanced temperature-dependent distribution underscores the delicate balance dung beetle populations maintain with their thermal environment. To support their analysis, the team employed pitfall traps baited with dung, fruit, and carrion, capturing nearly 5,000 individual beetles over the sampling periods of 2022 and 2023.
These findings hold profound implications beyond dung beetles alone. The researchers situate their work within a broader framework suggesting that many tropical insects could be nearing their heat tolerance thresholds due to climate warming. The Amazon basin, which harbors approximately 70% of the world’s described insect species, may face an unprecedented ecological crisis if temperature increases outpace the insects’ ability to adapt. The study notes that while some insects dwelling at higher altitudes can exhibit short-term acclimation to increasing temperatures, lowland species—including numerous dung beetle taxa—exhibit limited physiological plasticity, rendering them especially vulnerable.
This physiological constraint is critical given the essential ecological services dung beetles provide. Their diminishment or disappearance would not only jeopardize parasite control but also disrupt nutrient cycling that underpins forest productivity. Given the keystone nature of these organisms, their decline could reverberate through trophic levels and destabilize forest ecosystems already stressed by deforestation and habitat fragmentation.
Moreover, these climate-induced shifts may foreshadow broader biodiversity losses within tropical regions. Dung beetles serve as model organisms for understanding ecological responses to climate variables due to their sensitivity and relatively well-documented life histories. By elucidating the mechanisms driving their distribution and abundance, the study equips ecologists and conservationists with predictive frameworks to assess vulnerability across taxa sharing similar constraints.
The research integrates rigorous field sampling with ecological theory, demonstrating the pivotal role of temperature in shaping community composition along complex elevation gradients. This blend of observational data and analytical insight is vital in developing targeted conservation strategies aiming to mitigate the effects of climate change on tropical biodiversity. By recognizing the uneven heat tolerance across elevations, policy interventions might prioritize protecting mid-elevation refugia where thermal conditions remain favorable for a diverse insect fauna.
Clinching the broader significance is the study’s contribution to mounting evidence that anthropogenic climate change is not merely a future threat but a tangible factor already reshaping tropical insect biodiversity. The researchers argue that their results should prompt urgent attention from the scientific community and environmental policymakers alike, emphasizing the necessity of integrating climate resilience considerations into forest management plans.
Dr. Kim Holzmann, a principal investigator from Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, stresses that the warming trends observed in the Amazon lowlands impose “clear and observable effects” on these beetle populations, signaling an ecological alarm bell. Complementing this, Dr. Marcell Peters from the University of Bremen highlights the broader insect extinction risks, noting that failure to adapt physiologically to rising heat will truncate diversity and ecosystem functioning across multiple insect guilds.
In sum, this groundbreaking study sheds light on the precarious balance tropical insects maintain with their thermal environment and the dire implications of exceeding physiological heat thresholds. As the world grapples with accelerating climate change, understanding these biological constraints is vital for conserving the intricate web of life in some of Earth’s richest ecosystems. The fate of dung beetles along the Andean-Amazonian elevation gradient serves as a microcosm of the broader biodiversity challenges looming over the tropics.
Subject of Research: Animals
Article Title: Temperature boosts and constrains dung beetle diversity along an Andean-Amazonian elevation gradient
News Publication Date: 25-Mar-2026
Web References: https://www.uni-wuerzburg.de/en/news-and-events/news/detail/news/climate-change-tropical-insects-heat-limit/
References: DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2025.2792
Image Credits: Kim Lea Holzmann / University of Würzburg
Keywords: Dung beetles, Climate change, Amazon rainforest, Temperature tolerance, Species diversity, Elevation gradient, Tropical insects, Heat stress, Ecological resilience, Biodiversity loss, Nutrient cycling, Thermal physiology

