West Gippsland are helping to keep waterways clean and healthy with an innovative new breeding program aimed at using dung beetles to stop nutrient run-off from farms. Water Minister Harriet Shing visited a dung beetle nursery in Tonimbuk recently to inspect Melbourne Water’s dung beetle breeding program, being run by Cannibal Creek Landcare Group.
The breeding program was established 12 months ago and includes a network of 16 dung beetle ‘nurseries’ on Landcare and farming properties in the Macedon Ranges, Nillumbik Shire, Western Port and the Mornington Peninsula.
The dung beetle monitoring will take place with Landcare volunteers gathering and uploading observations and images of dung beetles to the BioCollect project app, with Atlas of Living Australia.
Dung beetles are known as ‘ecosystem engineers’ because they bury dung underground and turn nutrients into a natural fertiliser - this means nutrient runoff is significantly reduced from farms, helping to keep our waterways healthy. They have also been known to punch above their weight in a number of key areas crucial to farm sustainability, environmental management, herd health and even better waterways.
Dung beetles are seasonal and have periods of dormancy. The program run by Melbourne Water will monitor which seasons have low numbers and aim to breed and release suitable species to fill these gaps.
Success will be gauged by the number of dung beetles reared and released from the nurseries, aiming for a four-fold increase. The beetles will be shared with local landholders and to set up future breeding colonies and release onto paddocks.
Historically, many species of dung beetles have been released across Australia, but there has been very little monitoring of success in the region.
Ms Shing said dung beetles were amazing insects, with benefits for water quality and agriculture. “This project will help us understand more about them, while farmlands will benefit from the ecosystem service they provide.
“The health of our waterways and land is essential to our native wildlife, and to our way of life today, tomorrow and for generations to come,” she said.
Read more about the work being done by Cannibal Creek Landcare!Image attrition: Pam Cunningham of Cannibal Creek Landcare Group, Harriet Shing and Karen Thomas of Melbourne Water.#NativeFloraFauna#CoastWaterways