Dung beetles are one of the most charismatic animal taxa. Their familiarity as ecosystem service providers is clear, but they have also played a range of roles in a variety of different ecosystems worldwide. Here, we give an overview of the current state of dung beetle research and the changes in the prevalence of topics in a collated corpus of 4,145 peer-reviewed articles of dung beetle research spanning from 1930 until 2024. We used a range of text-analysis tools to assess how the peer-reviewed literature on dung beetles has changed over this period. Most of the literature is split into three distinct but related discourses – the agri/biological topics (Cluster 1), the ecological topics (Cluster 2), and the taxonomic topics (Cluster 3). Publications on the ‘effect of veterinary chemicals’ and ‘nesting behaviour’ showed the largest drop over time, whereas papers relating to ‘ecosystem function’ had a meteoric rise from a low presence before the 2000’s to being the most prevelant topic of dung beetle research in the last two decades. Research into dung beetles is global, but is dominated by Europe and North America. However South America, Africa, and Australia have coverage of most topics. Research in temperate and tropical mixed forests, as well as grasslands, savanna and shrublands dominated the corpus, as would be expected from a group of species directly associated with large mammals. Our assessment of dung beetle research comes when ecosystem service provision is becoming more important and more dominant in the literature globally. Research worldwide and across the three major discourses (agri/biological, ecological, and taxonomic) is imperative for a continued understanding of how dung beetles and their ecosystem services are modified across rapidly changing natural and agricultural landscapes.