SouthEast Asia's natural habitats are lowland tropical rainforests that harbor a large proportion of the Earth's biodiversity. These rainforests are affected by multiple drivers of biodiversity loss, including deforestation and hunting (Sodhi et al., 2004), with habitat loss being the major driver of species extinctions (Achard et al., 2002). Such large-scale anthropogenic disturbances are driving the extirpation of many large mammals (Bennett, 2000; Sodhi et al., 2004; Steinmetz et al., 2006; Corlett, 2007), resulting in potential cascading effects in tropical rainforest systems, such as secondary extinctions of dependent taxa and the subsequent decline of ecological processes performed by these associated species (Nichols et al., 2009). Scarabaeine dung beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeoidea) rely primarily on mammal dung as a food resource for adult beetles and their larvae (Hanski & Cambefort, 1991). Their diversity of dung manipulation, relocation, and consumption contributes to a series of beneficial ecosystem functions and services to tropical rainforests, such as secondary seed dispersal and nutrient cycling (Nichols et al., 2008). Thus, declines in mammal populations, resulting in reduced availability and changing composition of dung resources in tropical rainforests, are predicted to lead to changes in dung beetle communities and cascading effects for ecosystem functioning in these systems (Nichols et al., 2009; Raine & Slade, 2019). Recent work has shown that most dung beetles are generalists when foraging (Frank et al., 2018). However, even generalist dung beetle species have been shown to differentiate variations among differing dung compositions, size, and shape, and display preferences for certain dung types (Peck & Howden, 1984; Nichols & Gardner, 2011; Raine et al., 2019). Moreover, while dung beetle-mammal co-occurrences have been relatively well studied in the Neotropics (e.g., Bogoni et al., 2014; 2019; Nichols et al., 2016), dung beetle-mammal interactions are little explored in SouthEast Asia's forests (Frank et al., 2018; Raine & Slade, 2019). While co-occurrence data shed light on the possibility of such interactions, these can only be quantified by assessing the specific attractiveness of different dung types to individual species, and building quantitative networks (Frank et al., 2018; Raine & Slade, 2019). The first quantitative dung beetle-mammal network for a tropical forest region has recently been built for the Atlantic forest