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Weird: July 2009 Archives

A new study of thirty-million-year-old fossil "megadung" from extinct giant South American mammals reveals evidence of complex ecological interactions and theft of dung beetles' food stores by other animals, according to a study published in the journal Palaeontology.

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NGS photo of modern dung beetles by Chris Johns

"Thirty million years ago South America was home to what is known to paleontologists as the South America Megafauna, including some truly giant extinct herbivores: bone-covered armadillos the size of a small car, ground sloths 6 meters [20 feet] tall and elephant-size hoofed mammals unlike anything alive today," Palaeontology says in a statement released today.

"Megafauna would have produced megadung."

"And of course, megafauna would have produced megadung!"

The research was done by Graduate Student Victoria Sánchez and Dr Jorge Genise of the Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

dung-beetle-picture-2.jpgThey report traces made by other creatures within fossil dung balls.

"The beetles certainly had their work cut out for them and although the dung beetles themselves did not fossilize, we know they were fully engaged in business because, amazingly, the results of their activities are preserved as fossil dung balls, some more than 40 million years old, and some as large as tennis balls," Palaeontology says.

NGS illustration of white dung beetle by Hashime Murayama

"Now paleontologists in Argentina studying these dung balls have discovered that they have even more to tell us about the ecology of this lost world of giant mammals, but at a rather different scale."

"Some of these are just the results of chance interactions" Sánchez explains.

"Burrowing bees, for example, dug cells in the ground where the dung balls were buried, and some of these happen to have been dug into the balls.

"But other traces record the behaviour of animals actively stealing the food resources set aside by the dung beetles.

"The shapes and sizes of these fossilized burrows and borings in the dung balls indicate that other beetles, flies and earthworms were the culprits.

"Although none of these animals is preserved in these rocks, the fossil dung balls preserve in amazing detail a whole dung-based ecosystem going on right under the noses of the giant herbivores of 30 million years ago."

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NGS photo by Chris Johns

Extinct Dung Beetles "Deserve a Medal"

"The dung beetle has fallen on hard times," the researchers note in Palaeontology. "Once worshipped by ancient Egyptians its status has now slipped to that of unsung and forgotten hero, the butt of scatological jokes. Yet the dung beetle is truly heroic."

"Were it not for the dung beetle the world would be knee-deep in animal droppings."

"It is a well known 'fact' that were it not for the dung beetle the world would be knee-deep in animal droppings, especially those of large herbivores like cows, rhinos and elephants which, because they eat more food, produce more waste," the researchers continue.

"By burying that waste dung beetles not only remove it from the surface, they improve and fertilise the soil and reduce the number of disease-carrying flies that would otherwise infest the dung.

"If the modern dung beetle deserves praise for these global sanitation efforts, then the extinct dung beetles of ancient South America deserve a medal."

The dung beetle research by Sánchez and Genise was funded by CONICET, The Argentinean National Research Council for Science and Technolology.

More from National Geographic News:

Dung Fossils Suggest Dinosaurs Ate Grass

Dino Dung: Paleontology's Next Frontier?

For Dung Beetles, Monkey Business Is Serious Stuff

Dung Beetles Navigate by the Moon, Study Says

 

For 60 years scientists did not know why the adult Bourret's horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus paradoxolophus, the bat on the right in the picture below) has a nose so much larger than the nose of a typical horseshoe bat species (left).

Now Rolf Mueller, an associate professor with the Virginia Tech mechanical engineering department and director for the Bio-inspired Technology (BIT) Laboratory in Danville, Virginia, thinks he has an explanation: The bat uses its elongated nose to create a highly focused sonar beam.

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Photos by Rolf Mueller

"Much like a flashlight with an adjuster that can create an intense but small beam of light, the bat's nose can create a small but intense sonar beam," Virginia Tech said in a statement released with these photos.

"Mueller and his team used computer animation to compare varying sizes of bat noses, from small noses on other bats to the large nose of the paradoxolophus bat.

Perfect Mark of Evolution

"In what Mueller calls a perfect mark of evolution, he says his computer modeling shows the length of the paradoxolophus bat's nose stops at the exact point the sonar beam's focal point would become ineffective."

Bourret's horseshoe bat, from the remote rainforests of South East Asia, emits ultrasonic beams, or sonar, from its nose. The echoes of the sound wave convey a wealth of information on objects in the bat's environment.

The findings with the paradoxolophus bat are part of a larger study of approximately 120 different bat species and how they use sonar to perceive their environment. Set to finish in February 2010, it is hoped the study's focus on wave-based sensing and communication in bats will help spur groundwork for innovations in cell phone and satellite communications, as well as naval surveillance technology.

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Robots from the University of Stuttgart, Germany, are the winners of this year's RoboCup.

"The cooperative soccer-playing robots of the Universität Stuttgart are world champions in the middle size league of robot soccer," the University said in a news statement.

"After one of the most interesting competitions in the history of RoboCup from 29th June to 5th July, 2009, in Graz, the 1. RFC Stuttgart [team] on the last day of the competition succeeded in winning the world championship 2009 in an exciting game against the team of Tech United from Eindhoven (The Netherlands) with the final result of 4-1."

Stuttgart's robots competed against 13 other teams, from eight countries, among them the current world champion Cambada (Portugal). Besides the teams from Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Portugal, and Austria, teams from China, Japan, and Iran competed against each other.

The 1.RFC Stuttgart team included staff of two of the university's Institutes, the Department of Image Understanding of the Institute of Parallel and Distributed Systems and the Institute of Technical Optics. The team also won the prize for first place in the "scientific challenge" and placed second in the category "technical challenge."

robocup champions picture.pngRobocup champions picture courtesy University of Stuttgart

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"After the final match of the competition, the middle-size league robots of the 1. RFC Stuttgart--the new world champions--had to play against the human officials of the RoboCup Federation. It turned out ... the robots were the inferior team. Clearly the RoboCup community has still to bridge a vast distance to reach their final goal to let a humanoid robot team play against the human world champion by the year 2050," the university said.

Success in the RoboCup competition requires state-of-the-art real-time image processing and architectures, cooperative robotics, and distributed planning, the university added.

"Possible application scenarios of these research activities reach from autonomous vehicles, cooperative manufacturing robotics, service robotics to the point of planetary or deep-sea exploration by autonomous robotic systems.

"In this context autonomous means that no, or only a limited, human intervention is necessary."

Video: Best of RoboCup 2009 Graz (with finals)

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