Fertilizer defects have been discovered around the world, on all continents except Antarctica. They live in different locations from desert to forests.
Most turn to manure from herbivores or creatures that eat only plants, but others seek manure from omnivores or creatures that eat plants such as meat. To the point where, for example, a creature bites, swallows and processes an elephant, there are always parts of its food that pass untouched. These undigested pieces fall into the creature's compost - and that's the thing that feeds scarabs. Fertilizer crawling hatched chicks or chicks feed on solid compost, while large scarab excrements stick to fluids. There is a decent moisture of nutrients in the compost and the adult insects absorb the soup.
Where there is dirt, there are probably manure pitches. They have an area with three main encounters: rollers, tunnels and inhabitants. These words describe how scarabs use the compost they find.
In fact, the sun led to the development of bedbugs. So the light of the moon and distant stars of the Smooth Way. With everyday life given by manure, despite the rule of heaven, compost bed bugs can encapsulate Oscar Wild's award-winning quote: "We're all in a ditch, but some of us are looking at the stars."
Photos of my authorship