Studies on dung beetles have been conducted in some islands of Indonesia, such as in North Sulawesi (Hanski and Niemela 1990; Hanski and Krikken 1991), Sumatra (Gillison et al. 1996), and West Java (Noerdjito 2003), and Shahabuddin et al. (2005, 2007). More attention has to be paid to Sulawesi Island since with its unique geographical history (Whitten et al. 2002), about 75% of dung beetles species inhabited in Sulawesi are most likely endemic species (Hanski and Krikken 1991). However, most of those studies only focused on forest sites and did not take into account the relative contribution of land-use activities such as agroforestry on dung beetles diversity.