Beetles
Cowboy Beetle (Diaphonia dorsalis) Photo: B Hulbert.
Weevil (Family Curculionidae) front view. Photo: D. Britton.
Kangaroo Beetle, Sagra papuana (Family Chrysomelidae). Photo: S Humphreys.
Large Black Ground Beetle, Hyperion schroetteri (Family Carabidae). Photo: S Humphreys.
Jewel Beetles (Family Buprestidae). Photo: B Hulbert.
Beetle anatomy.
Beetle larva. Photo: R Major © Australian Museum
Larvae of a hide beetle. Photo: C Bento.
Hippodamia variegata (Family Coccinellidae), a ladybird beetle recently introduced into Australia from North America. Photo: D. Britton.
Leaf Beetle, Family Chrysomelidae, Sub-family Paropsinae. Photo: B Hulbert. Beetles are insects that belong to the Order Coleoptera. There are over 350,000 different known beetle species worldwide and new species are being discovered all the time. Beetles make up 40% of all insects and the number of beetle species is more than six times the number of all vertebrate species.
Australian Beetles
Of the 30,000 species that may occur in Australia, only 20,000 are scientifically described. Some1500 species may occur in the Sydney region.
Families with large numbers of species include:
Curculionidae (weevils): the largest family (6000 species)
Scarabaeidae (scarabs, dung beetles, chafers): 3000 species
Chrysomelidae (leaf beetles): 3000 species
Carabidae (ground beetles): 2500 species
Staphylinidae (rove beetles): 1600 species
Tenebrionidae (darkling beetles): 1500 species
Cerambycidae (longicorn beetles): 1200 species
Buprestidae (jewel beetles): 1200 species
Beetle Habitat
Beetles can be found in almost all available habitats, including in water.
Terrestrial beetles are found:
In soil and under rocks
On or in flowers, leaves, fruits and seeds
In leaf litter
Under tree bark
In rotting wood
On animal carcasses
In foodstuffs such as grains
In nests of other animals
Aquatic beetles can be found in a range of watery habitats from temporary puddles to mountain streams, lakes and even brackish or muddy habitats. Some species may even be found in the intertidal zone by the sea.
Beetle Anatomy
Beetles have a wide variety of body shapes, sizes and colours, however they are usually distinguished from other insects by having:
2 pairs of wings, with the first pair hardened into elytra (protective wing cases without veins), the second pair membranous and used for flying
Beetles are the only insects that have true elytra. This has enabled beetles to live in many habitats that would damage the wings of less well-protected insects, such as leaf litter, logs and soil. Some beetle species do not have hind wings and their elytra may be fused together. Some beetles have highly reduced elytra, with the hind wings folded up and others have no wings at all.
Beetles have legs that are normally adapted for walking or running, increasing in size from front to rear. However in some families one or more pairs may be modified for:
Burrowing in soil (eg Scarabaeidae, some Tenebrionidae)
Tunnelling in wood (eg some Curculionidae)
Swimming (eg Dytiscidae)
Jumping (eg some Chrysomelidae)
Beetle Life Cycle
Beetles are holometabolous. This means that their larvae pupate before emerging as adult insects. Beetle larvae are often referred to as grubs.
Beetle grubs are diverse in their shapes and habits. Most beetle grubs live in concealed habitats, such as underground or inside trees. There are many aquatic species, and a few which resemble caterpillars and feed openly on leaves. Many retain segmented legs, although weevil grubs nearly always lack legs. Most legless beetle grubs have robust chewing mouthparts and can be distinguished from similarly-shaped fly maggots, which often have modified mouth 'hooks'.
Feeding
Beetles, both adults and grubs, use their chewing mouthparts to eat other insects, fruit, nectar, leaves, fungi, dead animal and plant material, and/or wood. Some beetles form symbiotic relationships with other insects such as termites, ants or bees, living in their nests and either being tolerated or even actively protected and/or fed by their hosts.
Predation and defence
Many beetles produce chemical compounds that protect them against attack from bacteria, fungi and/or predators. Special glands produce these chemicals, which either render the whole beetle unpalatable to predators or are specifically released upon attack. Beetles with these defences are often brightly coloured as a warning to potential predators.
Another form of defence is the specialised detachable hair found on larvae in the Family Dermestidae. These hairs stick to predators such as ants and hinder them from attacking further.
Beetles as Pests
Some beetles can be household, garden and/or agricultural pests.
Household pests are either found eating foodstuffs such as grains and cereals, furnishings such as fabrics, carpet and animal products (eg hides) or wooden furniture. For example, cigarette and drugstore beetles infest foodstuffs, while hide and carpet beetles damage soft furnishings, and powderpost borers make holes in wooden furniture.
Beetles that can cause problems in gardens and/or in agriculture include: wood-borers such as longicorn beetle larvae (Cerambycidae) as well as beetles that may attack plant leaves, such as leaf beetles (Chrysomelidae), or roots, such as Christmas beetle (Scarabaeidae, genus Anoplognathus) and chafer grubs (Scarabaeidae, subfamily Melolonthinae).
Links
Fiddler Beetles Fact sheet
What are the differences between bugs and beetles?
Wildlife of Sydney: Beetles
http://www.faunanet.gov.au/wos/group.cfm?Group_ID=23
Death Online: Corpse Fauna - Beetles
http://www.deathonline.net/decomposition/corpse_fauna/beetles/index.htm
Dung Beetles of New South Wales
http://faunanet.gov.au/faunakeys/dung_intro.htm
Flower Chafers of New South Wales
http://faunanet.gov.au/faunakeys/chafers_intro.htm
Christmas Beetles of New South Wales
http://faunanet.gov.au/faunakeys/christmas_intro.htm
Criocerinae of New South Wales
http://faunanet.gov.au/fauna keys/criocerinae_intro.htm
Spilopyrinae of New South Wales
http://faunanet.gov.au/faunakeys/spilopyrinae_intro.htm
Sagrinae of New South Wales
http://faunanet.gov.au/faunakeys/sagrinae_intro.htm
CSIRO Ecowatch: Coleoptera
http://www.ento.csiro.au/Ecowatch/Coleoptera/Coleoptera.htm
Scribbly Gum: Beautiful Beetles
http://www.abc.net.au/science/scribblygum/december2003/
Reference
CSIRO. 1991. The Insects of Australia. CSIRO Publishing.
2006-08-23 17:30:49
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answer #4
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