1. Most adult coprophagous beetles feed on fresh dung of mammalian herbivores, confining ingestion to small particles with measured maximum diameters from 2 -5 to 130 m, according to body size and kind of beetle. This study explores benefits and costs of selective feeding in a 'typical' dung beetle with a maximum diameter of ingested particles (MDIP) of 20 m.2. Examined dung types (from Danish domestic sheep, cattle and horse, and African wild buffalo, white rhino and elephant) contained 76 -89% water. Costs of a 20 m MDIP were often low, since 69 -87% of the total nitrogen in bulk dung other than that of elephant and rhino (40 -58%) was available to selective feeders.3. Nitrogen concentrations were high -and C/N ratios low -in most types of bulk dung compared with the average food of terrestrial detritivores or herbivores. Exceptions were elephant and rhino dung with low nitrogen concentrations and high C/N ratios.4. Estimated C/N ratios of 13 -39 in bulk dung (sheep -elephant) were decreased by selective feeding to 7.3 -12.6 in the ingested material. In assimilated food, ratios are probably only 5 -7, as most assimilable nitrogen and carbon may be of microbial origin. If so, the assimilable food contains a surplus of nitrogen relative to carbon.5. The primary advantage of selective feeding, particularly in dung with a high C/N ratio, may be to concentrate assimilable carbon in the ingested food. Effects of changing the MDIP within 20 -106 m are modest, especially in dung with a low C/N ratio.
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