The study of seed fate is crucial for understanding fruit-frugivore interactions. One factor that can greatly
influence the fate of seeds dispersed through mammal defecation, is the dung that accompanies the seeds. Dung attracts
dung beetles and rodents; the former eat and bury dung, the latter feed on seeds. In this study the fate of Micropholis
guyanensis subsp. guyanensis seeds surrounded by no dung and by 5, 10 and 25 g of howler monkey dung was
followed until seedling establishment. The depths at which dung beetles bury the seeds were measured, and the effect
of burial depth on seedling emergence was determined. Although initial seed fates differed among treatments, the
same percentage of seedlings established from seeds without faecal material, and from seeds with 5, 10 and 25 g of
dung. However, a significantly higher proportion of seedlings established from buried seeds when compared to seeds
that remained on the surface. The percentage of seedlings establishing in a controlled germination experiment decreased
significantly with increasing burial depth. The effect of dung beetle activity should be taken into consideration when
assessing the role that mammal endozoochory plays on seed dispersal ecology of tropical plants. These results provide
further evidence for the emerging realization that the study of secondary seed dispersal and post-dispersal events is
crucial for a more complete understanding of plant regeneration.