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The Dung Beetle: Earth's Strongest Animal by Any Meaningful Measure

March 28, 2026 · 4 min read

The Fact

The dung beetle is the strongest insect relative to body size, capable of pulling 1,141 times its own body weight.

A Number That Reframes Strength

The horned dung beetle (Onthophagus taurus) was measured by researchers at the University of Exeter pulling loads equivalent to 1,141 times its body weight — a feat documented in a 2010 paper in the journal Biology Letters. To put that in human terms: a 70-kilogram person would need to pull approximately 80,000 kilograms, or about six fully loaded double-decker buses simultaneously, to match the dung beetle's relative performance.

Comparisons across the animal kingdom place this figure in context. A leafcutter ant can carry roughly 50 times its body weight overhead. A rhinoceros beetle, previously celebrated as the strongest animal relative to size, can carry approximately 850 times its body weight. The gorilla, the animal most people associate with raw strength, can carry perhaps ten times its body weight. The dung beetle's 1,141 times remains the documented champion across all animal species studied.

Understanding why requires looking at both the physics of small bodies and the specific ecological context that drove the dung beetle's extraordinary musculature to evolve.

Why Small Animals Are Proportionally Stronger

The relative strength advantage of small animals over large ones is not magic — it is geometry. Muscle strength scales with cross-sectional area (proportional to the square of linear dimensions), while body weight scales with volume (proportional to the cube of linear dimensions). As an animal gets larger, its weight grows much faster than its muscle cross-section. A beetle scaled up to the size of a human would be crushed by its own weight before it could lift anything.

For a small insect, this relationship works in reverse. Its weight is trivially small while its legs, packed with muscle fibers, can generate forces that are enormous relative to that weight. The exoskeleton further concentrates the mechanical advantage: unlike vertebrates, where muscles pull on bones that are encased inside a soft body, insect muscles attach directly to the inner surface of the rigid exoskeleton, creating a closed mechanical system that can transmit force more efficiently.

The dung beetle's legs are not just muscular — they are architecturally optimized for pulling and pushing. The hind legs in particular are strongly built, with enlarged femora that house the primary locomotive muscles used in rolling and pulling dung balls.

The Ecological Driver: Fighting for Dung

The extreme pulling strength of the horned dung beetle has a specific ecological explanation: competition over dung. Female dung beetles excavate tunnels directly beneath dung piles and drag portions of dung underground for breeding. Males compete intensely for access to these burrows, entering tunnels and using their horns and their remarkable strength to drag rivals backward out of the passage.

The 1,141 times measurement was specifically conducted in this competitive context, measuring the force required to drag a male from a defended tunnel. Males that can exert more force in these underground wrestling matches gain access to more females and produce more offspring. Over millions of years, this sexual selection pressure has driven the evolution of disproportionate strength in male dung beetles, particularly in the hind legs and thorax used in tunnel fighting.

This is an example of how sexual selection — competition between individuals of the same sex for reproductive access — can drive traits to extreme levels that far exceed what would be needed simply for survival. The dung beetle does not need to pull 1,141 times its own weight to find food or escape predators; it needs that strength to outcompete rival males in the darkness of a tunnel dug beneath a pile of dung.

A Beetle That Reads the Stars

The dung beetle's remarkable capabilities extend beyond brute strength. Research published in 2013 demonstrated that the African dung beetle Scarabaeus satyrus uses the Milky Way galaxy to navigate at night — the first animal known to use the galactic light band as a compass. When rolling dung balls away from a competitive dung pile, beetles navigate in straight lines to prevent circling back. On moonless nights, they use the diffuse light of the Milky Way to maintain a consistent heading.

This navigational sophistication in an animal best known for rolling excrement is a reminder that even the most seemingly unglamorous ecological role can produce extraordinary adaptations. The dung beetle is simultaneously the world's strongest animal by relative body weight and one of its most accomplished celestial navigators — a combination that makes it one of the most remarkable insects alive.

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FactOTD Editorial Team

Published March 28, 2026 · 4 min read

The FactOTD editorial team researches and verifies every fact before publication. Our mission is to make learning effortless and accurate. Learn about our process →

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