شناسایی Beetles _ Coleoptera

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Longhorn Beetles (Cerambycidae)

Longhorn Beetles (Cerambycidae)

One of the most remarkable Longhorns probably is the species depicted below. Not only does it have bulky thighs, the shields are very small as well. Each shield has just one white stripe. The abdomen is much longer than the shields are. The wings however have the usual length and cover the ***** body. It does look like the Rove Beetles a lot, but these have very short antennae. Molorchus minor however has the usual longhorn antennae. At first glance the animal also looks like a parasitic wasp. It lacks the typical wasp waist however. It also does look like an earwig, but it lacks the pincers and unlike earwigs, which fold their wings under their little shields, the wings of this beetle are always visible. It is a conifer species and not very common.

This curiously shaped longhorn is called Molorchus minor.






 

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Longhorn Beetles (Cerambycidae)

Longhorn Beetles (Cerambycidae)

Many Longhorn Beetles are quite big and thus easily noticed. There are also quite a few very small species though. Take the beautiful Plumb Beetle below. It is named after its host plant, for the larvae are found in twigs of plumb trees. It likes other trees and shrubs as well, including roses. This animal is probably often overlooked, for it reaches a length of 3 to 6 mm only. Usually it takes the larvae 1 year to develop into an adult beetle, but sometimes they need two years to develop. The entire animal is strikingly hairy. The thorax shield and the tips of the elytra are kind of black, but under the right light circumstances they may turn into a wonderful, metallic blue. This species is very common all over Europe and has even reached Northern America. The scientific name Tetrops praeusta is still often used for this species, but it is wrong, for Tetrops apparently is a male word.

A very small Longhorn Beetle: the Plumb Beetle (Tetrops praeustus). In direct sunlight the black parts might reveal a beautiful metallic blue colour.






 

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Longhorn Beetles (Cerambycidae)

Longhorn Beetles (Cerambycidae)

Below we like to introduce a very small longhorn beetle. It is a dark, not very colourful species which reaches a length of 3 to 7 mm only. From some of the similar dark species it can be told apart by its ringed antennae. The larvae just live for one year under the bark of moulding and rotting wood. They are found in trees, such as willow and oak and in shrubs, such as blackberries and ivy and even in cultivars such as berberis. The adults are often seen on flowers and frequently encountered on Hawthorn, Dog-rose and Bramble. This is a common species in Europe, including all of the British Isles, Russia, Turkey and Western Asia.

This small, dark and rather non descript long horn beetle is called Grammoptera ruficornis.






 

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Soft-winged Beetles _ Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Soft-winged Beetles _ Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Soft-winged Beetles

Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)


When you look at them vertically you can see that the soldier beetles are called that way because they really do remind one of old fashioned soldier uniforms. There are over 50 species in the Low Countries. Many species are very similar and therefore difficult to tell apart. Often you can find them sunbasking on flowers. The adults eat other insects. In some casese they hunt for prey, but most eat animals that are already dead. The larvae hunt for snails, slugs and worms on the ground, even though there are some vegetarians among them. The most common of all soldier beetles probably is the Hogweed Bonking Beetle below. In summer they often appear in great numbers, basking in sunshine or copulating on flowers, especially umbellifer. As the flowers of many umbellifers are whitish the beetles are very striking. Due to their reddish colours birds will leave them alone. Reaching some 7 to 10 mm in length it is a typical representative of its family. As the species also loves verges and banks it may be considered to be a real opportunist, explaining its abundancy all over Europe and the British Isles. It is an excellent species to predict a thunderstorm, for when all the animals are retreating to the backside of leaves a thunderstorm will be advancing. Do not hurry though: they take shelter many hours before the thunderstorm arrives! You can tell them apart from most family members by looking at the colouring: the entire head ans neck shields are red, the shields are dark red, except for the ends where they get darker and the legs are red, except for the feet.

The Hogweed Bonking Beetle (Rhagonycha fulva) is often seen in copula on plants and flowers.














 

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Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Below one of the more difficult species, for it appears in two variations. Most seen is a light reddish yellow appearance. But quite often the dark reddish brown variation keeps popping up. In German the common name of this animal is well choosen: the "variable soft-wing". The dark form looks like many other soft-wings, especially the Hogweed Bonking Beetle above. Yet the differences are not that difficult to see. C. livida has a black forhead, the legs change from red to black and while the Hogweed Bonking Beetle has the last part of the shields darkened, those of C. livida are darker on the front. This is a common species, and sometimes even abundant species in many parts of Britain and a very common to abundant species on the continent.

This is the very common Cantharis livida in its dark variation.













 

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Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Below another red species. It often looks like the red form of Cantharis livida a lot and sometimes one needs to examine the genitals to tell both species apart. But usually Cantharis rufa is the smallest of the two, the shields do not begin in a dark colour and the black spot on the neck shield is either absent or much smaller than Cantharis livida's. This is a wide spread species found all over Europe, including all of the British Isles and Ireland, Siberia and parts of Northern Asia, everywhere even beyond the Arctic Circle.

The identification of this species, Cantharis rufa, may be troublesome at times.






 

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Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Many species in this family are blackish. These blackish species are often referred to as Sailor Beetles. So the species below is one of those. It is a little bigger than the Hogwood Bonking Beetle, measuring some 10 to 14 mm. It is a common species in Europe, but never as abundant as the two previous species, as it is usually found in flowery meadows and fringes of woodlands. Look for the following characteristics: the face is red, the head is black, the neck shield is red with no black markings, the shields are black and the legs are black, except for the first part.

One of the so-called Sailor Beetles: Cantharis pellucida.






 

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Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Another typical Sailor Beetle is the species below. In order to identify it pay attention to the fact that it is all black, except for the edges of the neck shield which are red. The larvae live in oak mainly, but are often found in orchards as well. They may be harmful to the trees, when there are a lot them. But not only do they eat fresh leaves, they hunt for aphids and other small insects as well. Once adult they measure some 9 to 13 mm. in length. The adults have the same diet as the larvae have. It is a common species all over Europe, including Scotland.

This black soldier beetle is called Cantharis obscura.


















 

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Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae)

Yet another appeared in our garden. It appeared right after winter and it is therefor fair te assume it hibernated as an adult. Because of the hibernation the colours may be non typical. According to Boris Büche we are talking about Rhagonycha testacea. Reaching a length of some 9 to 12 mm, this too is a typical representattive of its family. It is common all over Europe, including all of the British Isles and is found in parts of the USA as well.

Another Rhagonycha in our garden: Rhagonycha testacea, another species without common English name.






 

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Soft-winged Flower Beetles (Malachiidae)

Soft-winged Flower Beetles (Malachiidae)

Soft-winged Flower Beetles (Malachiidae)

Below a very beautiful beetle. It is one of the Malachids, of which some 16 species can be found in Britain. Each species has its own combination of metallic colours, usually green and red or blue and red. Malachids have soft wings as well and their shape reminds one of the soldier beetles as well. But usually their shields are quite short, leaving the rear end of the actually body exposed. The species below is called Red-tipped Flower Beetle for obvious reasons and it is a frequently seen species in many gardens. It hunts for other small insects, but eats pollen as well. The species can be seen from early spring till late autumn, although it is abundant in June and July only. It used to live in wildflower fields and meadows, but later invaded parks and gardens as well. It shows little variation in length: some 6 mm. The larvae are hunters. They are found in cow dung and moulded wood.

The Red-tipped Flower Beetle (Malachius bipustulatus) can be found on flowers, hunting for other insects.












 

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Big Beetles (various families)

Big Beetles (various families)

Big Beetles (various families)

Ground Beetles, Darkling Beetles and Carrion Beetles (Carabidae, Tenebrionidae & Silphidae)

Beetles can have many colours. Most have a colour that makes them look less striking on plants, others that live on the ground have very dark colours. Ground Beetles, also known as Carabid beetles, run in order to catch their prey. Most of them live by night. Some can be easily found by turning rocks and logs. The majority of the carabids is black or brown, even though some have metallic colours. According to Victor Shilenkov the beetle shown below to the right is Nebria brevicollis. This is a 10 to 15 mm. long species. In sunshine it often has metallic blue shiny colours. This probably is the most common groundbeetle in Europe. You well find it in woods, hedges, but also in gardens and parks, even in the centre of big cities. Studies show this to be the commonest species in both London and Hamburg. The eggs are deposited in late summer and the larva overwinters. It is the first groundbeetle to leave the pupa in spring. Some other species may seem to beat this one to it, but those are species of which the adults overwinter. It is a useful species in the garden, for it hunts for other beetles, such as the awful Strawberry Weevil and even eats aphids. To the right a Carrion Beetle. The name of this family is slightly misleading, for many species do not use carrion, but actively hunt for insects in about the same way Carabids do. The species below is very common on the European continent and lives in most parts of Russia as well. However we are not sure the animal lives in the UK. Carrion beetles hardly ever eat the carrion themselves: most adults are vegetarians. No the carrion is food for the larvae. Often lots of carrion beetles work together on bigger carcasses. As soon as they smell a dead animal, especially a bird or mammal, thet 'run' to it and start digging below the carcas. After a while the dead animal will drop into the hole the carrion beetles dug. They'll deposit their eggs and fill up the whole. The larva will have plenty of food after hatching. Silpha obscura below does eat carrion being an adult and if no carrion as at hand it even becomes an active hunter! The animal reaches a length of some 14 to 18 mm, but actually may look bigger because of the round shaped and rather massive body. It is a very common species all over Europe (including most of Britain) and Northern Asia.

To the left Nebria brevicollis, a Ground Beetle and to the right probably Silpha obscura, a Carrion Beetle.






 

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Ground Beetles, Darkling Beetles and Carrion Beetles (Carabidae, Tenebrionidae & Silphidae)

Ground Beetles, Darkling Beetles and Carrion Beetles (Carabidae, Tenebrionidae & Silphidae)

Carrion beetles are the vultures of cool Western Europe, but not all species eat from the remains. Below a very beautiful two-coloured species: Oiceoptoma thoracica. These are able flyers and it is amazing how quickly they discover a dead bird or small mammal. Walking however is a laborious task. After a dead body has been discovered lots of beetles tend to run over it. After some time however a couple will form and they will become predominant, chasing away the others. The animals are not only interested in corpses, but in decaying mushrooms and dung as well. Curiously enough this species does not eat the material itself, but both adults and larvae hunt for larvae of other insects, such as flies, eating from the remains. Both adults and larvae spit out their ugly smelling stomach contents when threatened. The larvae are black and quite similar to wood lice. The scientific name is also spelled Oiceoptoma thoracicum.

This badly smelling, but quite beautiful carrion beetle is called Oiceoptoma thoracica.









 

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Ground Beetles, Darkling Beetles and Carrion Beetles (Carabidae, Tenebrionidae & Silphidae)

Ground Beetles, Darkling Beetles and Carrion Beetles (Carabidae, Tenebrionidae & Silphidae)

Black ground beetles are numerous in many gardens. It is often very difficult to tell what species you are looking at. The genus Amara for instance is comprised of a number of black ground beetles, many of which appear in gardens regularly. Both adults and larvae are known to be carnivors. Some species are even experimented with in order to find out whether they can be useful in biological pest control. However recent Danish studies seem to suggest that the larvae of some species do feed on plants as well. Many experts, among others Denis Keith and Dr. Arved Lompe are convinced this is an Amara sp., but they are unable to tell us the exact species. Anyway, with these black ground beetle an identification on genus level is quite an achievement! Like many other Amara-species this beetle is some 8 mm.

Another black ground beetle regularly found in gardens: an Amara species.






 

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Ground Beetles, Darkling Beetles and Carrion Beetles (Carabidae, Tenebrionidae & Silphidae)

Ground Beetles, Darkling Beetles and Carrion Beetles (Carabidae, Tenebrionidae & Silphidae)

Darkling Beetles do look like Ground Beetles very much. It is a big beetle family comprised of some 15,000 species world wide. In Europe however there are not that many. In the Benelux area only some 30 species stumble about. The majority is, just like the ground beetles, black or brownish. Even though looking like Ground Beetles, there are some differences: the eyes are notched and the hind tarsus (last part of the leg) has 4 segments only (Ground Beetles have 5). There are other differences as well, but these are not that easy to see. Both the larvae and the adult beetles are scavengers. The best known representative is the Mealworm. It is a pest in storage houses, but the larvae are also sold as food for certain pets. The species below may appear in gardens with trees, for the larvae live in the sandy soil around older trees, especially oak. The beetles are often found in the same trees. It is however a typical species of woodlands and probably not seen in many gardens. Scientifically also known as Cylindronotus laevioctostriatus.

Looking much like a ground beetle, but actually being a Darkling Beetle: Nalassus laevioctostriatus.






 

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Diving Beetles and Water Beetles (Dytiscidae & Hydrophilidae)

Diving Beetles and Water Beetles (Dytiscidae & Hydrophilidae)

Diving Beetles and Water Beetles (Dytiscidae & Hydrophilidae)

Even in small ponds you can find Diving Beetles. Some people wonder how they got there. Well, the Diving Beetles can do more than just dive: they can fly as well. So they can take many opportunities to explore new wells, ponds and streams. They are among the biggest beetles in the Benelux area: up to 4 centimeters in length! They swim using their back legs. The front and middle legs are used to cling to plants in the water or to grab a prey. One of the best known water beetles in both Europe and America is the Water Tiger below. The pictures are of a lonely male strolling through our garden on a windy and rainy March evening. We took it inside for a moment where it served as a patient model. You can tell the males apart from the females by the strange discs on the front legs. These are sucking discs, which are used to get a hold of the fast swimming females during copulation. The Water Tiger is a big animal. The one in the pictures below was almost 38 mm! The adults are long lived and sometimes can be up to 5 years of age. In the moderate zones of Europe this is probably the species that lives longest, once being adult. The larvae live in the water exclusively and my be up to 60 mm long. Both adults and larvae are formidable hunters. Usually the larvae will attack any pray that is not much bigger than they are themselves. Adults really don't care and will attack even fish well over one meter long and bite a piece out of it, usually near the back. They may be harmful in ponds, for even though their bite will not kill bigger fish, through the wound sickness and disease may enter, causing the fish to decease in the end. The adults are capable of biting people painfully. Larvae might bite people as well, but their jaws are rarely powerful enough to go through the skin. Better not experiment with this, for should a larva get through your skin the bite is extremely painful. The larva starts to injects its digestive acid immediately, making the wound even more painful and causing it to heal extremely slowly at the same time.

Hijacked and abused as a model when walking in our garden: the male of the Water Tiger(Dytiscus marginalis).










 

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Diving Beetles and Water Beetles (Dytiscidae & Hydrophilidae)

Diving Beetles and Water Beetles (Dytiscidae & Hydrophilidae)

The species below is called the Grooved Diving Beetle. The name is rather misleading, for only the female has grooved shields. The male has smooth shields and often is difficult to identify, looking like a number of other diving beetles. It is a very small species, reaching some 16 to 18 mm, not able to bite humans dreadfully. The larvae are not very big either and easily identifiable by their relatively long neck. The beetle overwinters in water. Until the water freezes over it remains rather active.

This is the Lesser (or Grooved) Diving Beetle (Acilius sulcatus).




 

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Diving Beetles and Water Beetles (Dytiscidae & Hydrophilidae)

Diving Beetles and Water Beetles (Dytiscidae & Hydrophilidae)

Water Beetles of the family Hydrophilidae are a strange lot. Some are big black beetles and excellent swimmers, others are much smaller, sometimes even colourful, living on land, not even capable of swimming. Diving Beetles take air with them by keeping it under the elytrae. That's why you can see them breathing by sticking their back side out of the water. Water Beetles use their antennae to push air under their body, where it is hold bij many hairs present there. Except for some bigger species many are not good swimmers and they just crawl over the plants. Helophorus aequalis belongs to a genus of which some members live in the water and others don't. A close relative even is a pest in rape-seed. The species below is always found near water, hardly ever in it. The larvae however do live in the water and are fierce predators.

A strange Waterbeetle this Helophorus aequalis, for it hardly ever swims.












 

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Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

All Scarab Beetles have two common factors: they are rather large and bulgy beetles and they all have a kind of fan at the end of their antennae. This fan exists of at least three parts that can be folded together. With the May Bug, also known as Maybeetle or Cockchafer, this is also the way to tell the males and females apart: females have a fan built up of six parts, while the male's fan has seven members. Just look at the pictures below. On the left you see a white grub, the larva of a Chafer. These larvae are also known as rookworms.

The May Bug or Cock Chafer (Melolontha melolontha): to the left white grub, in the middle female and to the right male.


























 

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Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Below to the left you see a close relative of the famous Cockchafer: the Bracken Chafer (also known as Garden Chaffer or Garden Foliage Beetle). The adults chew on the butts of plants (roses for instance) and can therefor become a pest when there are a lot of them. Usually there are few adults around, so not much harm is done. The larva is much more harmful. They eat grass roots, just under the surface. This way grass can become detached from its roots, making it possible to lift entire sods. Underneath numerous larvae can be found. And that's not all: moles and birds are keen on these grubs and can do even more damage to the grass trying to reach them. All these animals often become a plague in the neat lawns on tenniscourts and golf clubs. Nowadays the grubs of the Garden Chafer are effectively fought off by means of biological means: nematods. These are minute worms that are parasites to the grubs, killing them quite quickly. Below to the right a similar species: the Margined Vine Chafer. It is a little bigger, less hairy and always has a green appearance, even in the brown shields. It's larvae are as destructive in lawns as the Bracken's are.

Two lawn destroyers: The Bracken or Garden Chafer, also known as the Garden Foliage Beetle (Phyllopertha horticola) to the left and the similar but greener Margined Vine Chafer (Anomala dubia).























 

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Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

The Brown Chafer (also known as Brown Garden Chafer) has a rusty brown colour indeed. The head is black with striking eyes bulging out. Reaching some 11 mm, it is much smaller than the May Chafer is and almost hairless. The grub lives underground for two years and eats roots as well, mainly those of grasses. The species rarely is harmful in agriculture or your garden, for it usuallt appears in quite small numbers. Besides the same nematod use against Garden Chafers will destroy many Brown ones as well. The species prefers dry, sandy soil. Where the May Chafer is a very slow walker, the Brown Chafer can really run and is very fast on the ground.

A smaller cousin of the May Bug: the Brown Chafer (Serica brunnea).






 

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Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

The family of Scarab Beetles is not only comprised of the Chafers, but of the Dung Beetles as well. They look for fresh dung, dig a hole in the earth, put the dung in, lay an egg on it and cover it with earth. After hatching the larvae will feed on the dung. In forests we regularly see them walking about slowly. These are the big, black or blueish black species. In gardens these are rare, but we might find one of the numerous smaller species, often belonging to a genus called Aphodius. They are attracted to rabbit dung especially. After hatching the grubs will eat the dung, but may be harmful to grass roots as well. This way they sometimes cause damage to golf courses. But usually more damage is done by birds that feed on them. Especially rooks and other crow family members can do a lot of so-called secundary damage by turning the grass over searching for the larvae. It is a very common chafer throughout Europe (including the British Isles) and Asia.

This Aphodius contaminatus is one of the smaller dung beetles.




 

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Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

The most common dungbeetle in our part of Europe is Aphodius prodromus below. It is a difficult species to identify, for it is extremely similar to another very common species: Aphodius sphacelatus. Both are species especially found in winter and spring. More about this species in future when we will dedicate a page to it.

Aphodius prodromus is the favourite source of food in early spring by many crows as Jackdaws, Hooded Crows and Rooks.






 

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Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

In this chapter we'll be dealing with some beetles belonging to smaller or rare families, of which only very few representatives will pop up in one's garden. In Western Europe some three species of Cardinal Beetles (Fam. Pyrochroidae) are in existance. All species are uncommon or even rare. This means we were very lucky finding the Black-headed Cardinal Beetle in our garden, for it will not pop up there frequently. Even though it is not a very big species (14 to 20 mm), it will catch your attention immediately, because of the striking red colour. The adults may be found behind the loose bark of moulding trees, they will also visit flowers to eat pollen. The larvae live for 2 or three years in dead, rotting trees. They hunt for other beetle larvae, mainly those of Longhorns and Jewel Beetles. This species can be encountered all over Europe, including most of the British Isles, but it is not common anywhere.

Very uncommon to see in one's garden: the Black-headed Cardinal Beetle (Pyrochroa coccinea).












 

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Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Lagria hirta below belongs to its own family of beetles, called the Lagrid Beetles (Lagriidae). A very small family, for it is represented by only two species in Britain. Of the two only this one is quite common. The beetle itself is black, but the shields are brown and covered in small, thin hairs. The beetle reaches a length of some 10mm. The larvae are usually found among leaf litter on the ground, but do live in compost heaps as well. The larva overwinters and pupates in early spring. Adult beetles are seen from April to October. Lagria hirta prefers meadows, forest clearings, parks and gardens, if not too dry. A common species in Wales and most of England. Less common in Northern England and a local species in Scotland.

When you are making your own compost, this species, Lagria hirta, is likely to turn up in your garden.




 

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Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Scarab Beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Would there ever be a competition for having the best common English name, I would certainly nominate the big, black beetle below. It is called the Devil's Coach Horse. It is a very big beetle and an exception within his family of Rove Beetles, comprised of hundreds of small species, many not even reaching 5 mm. The rest of this family is therefore dealt with in the small bittles section. In Britain there are hundreds of Rove Beetle species. Actually this is the biggest group of beetles in Western Europe. All species have very short shields (elytrae), covering only up to one third of the abdomen. The wings are folded under the small shields, much the way earwigs do. Only a few species have lost the ability to fly alltogether. Most species are small, but a few are quite big and behave baldly when they feel threatened. Best known is the Devil's Coach Horse. A very common species, often found in gardens. Especially in autumn it is regularly found indoors, usually causing panic, fear and amazement. When approached it will lift its head and curl up its abdomen. This makes it look like a very small scorpion. It's his defense position: he's ready to attack. It has big, powerful jaws, easily capable of penetrating the human skin to deliver a painful bite and it won't let go quickly. And on the curled abdomen are two glands producing a very nasty smelling stuff it sprays into your direction. This is a very welcome guest in your garden though, for it eats a lot of snails. Measuring up to 33 mm this is the biggest of all European Rove Beetles. A very common species all over the British Isles, including the Shetlands.

Our biggest Rove Beetle, the Devil's Coach Horsehttp://www.gardensafari.net/english/picpages/staphylinus_olens.htm (Staphylinus olens), has the head of an alien...











 

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