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Funny short stories of dung beetles

A dung beetle, pushing a dung ball, runs on the uneven mountain road. There are a lot of rubble and clods on the road, but he is not slow in pushing. Not far ahead of the road, a plant's thorns are very sharp and grow obliquely on the road, and its roots are thick and sharp, which is particularly conspicuous. Maybe it's an arrangement. The dung beetle just ran in this direction. It pushed the dung ball, once. Dung beetles didn't find themselves in trouble. I pushed it for a while, but it didn't move. I pushed it back, but it still didn't work. It also pushed away the surrounding clods and tried to push hard from the side-all the ways were thought of. But the dung ball is still deeply stuck on the thorn and there is no sign of coming out. I can't help laughing at its perseverance, but at the same time I feel that it is impossible to solve this problem, waiting for it to fail and leave in frustration. It suddenly went around to the other side of the dung ball and only touched it gently. Gollum-stubborn dung ball "escaped" from that thorn. It won. No cheers after victory, no sighs after rushing out of trouble. After winning, the dung beetle almost didn't stop as if nothing had happened just now, so it pushed the dung ball forward urgently. Only an audience like me is left. If you can't push it, it's the same life From this, maybe life will be painless. There are more people than animals, just the wisdom to care about gains and losses and feel pain.

The observer's record is vivid and true, but his exclamation may not be correct. "If you are not a fish, how do you know the happiness of fish?" You're not dung beetles, how do you know that dung beetles has no pain? Humans and dung beetles have no language to communicate with. Moreover, dung beetles roll dung balls not for any purpose, but to prepare for giving birth to offspring. Every summer and autumn is the breeding season of dung beetles, and a female and a male often roll a dung ball in close cooperation. When it grows to the size of a ping-pong ball, the female worm digs loose the soil under the dung ball with rake-shaped horns and three pairs of prickly feet, and the dung ball becomes loose. Then dig a hole in the dung ball, lay a white egg, and finally cover the dung ball with loose soil and compact it. Eggs develop into white fat larvae in dung balls, and dung balls become ready-made food for this little life.

Dung beetles can clean up environmental pollution. There is a story about the dung beetle saving Australia. It tells the story of/kloc-when Australia was just developed in the late 8th century, before the arrival of the first immigrants, it was an endless prairie. The prairie welcomes immigrants, cattle and other livestock. The number of cattle has increased, and so has cow dung. Over time, the pasture was suppressed and pieces of open space appeared on the vast grassland. At the same time, buffalo flies and shrub flies brought by cattle also multiply rapidly, seriously polluting the environment and becoming a major public hazard. In the face of public hazards, Australians set up isolation zones and sprayed chemicals, but the results did not help. At this time, it was remembered that dung beetles ate excrement, and buried the rolled dung balls in the ground, which had amazing dung cleaning ability. An African dung beetles, its adult can make dung balls much bigger than itself, two. You can bury 1 000 cc of feces underground. There are dung beetles in Australia, but the dung beetles here are only interested in kangaroo feces. Just as the gadfly only sucks cow blood and the dog flies only bite dogs, dung beetles, which eats cow dung, also needs to be introduced. The introduced dung beetles quickly cleaned up the feces, the grass looked up, and the buried dung balls provided nutrients, which flourished rapidly and the flies lost their breeding grounds.