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| COLEOPTERA, Hydrophilidae --  <Images> & <Juveniles>     Description & Statistics            There is a much greater variety in
  behavior among members of this family than in the wholly aquatic
  Coleoptera.  Most species are aquatic,
  but a number of the subfamily Sphaeridiinae are terrestrial in all stages,
  living in moist soil or associated with animal wastes (Legner et al. 1980, 1981).  Adults are commonly known as "water
  scavenger beetles."  Balduf
  (cited by Clausen, 1940) provided an extensive early account of hydrophylid
  behavior.             Aquatic
  hydrophilids are most often found in ponds, especially those having extensive
  vegetative growth, although they also may be found along streams.  Adult beetles are principally scavengers,
  consuming decaying animal matter and also living on dead plant tissue.  Many species feed mostly on algae and
  other lower forms of plant life. 
  Although most larvae are predaceous, there are some exceptions.  Predaceous forms feed on various worms,
  snails, insect larvae and pupae, Entomostraca, small fish, crayfish and
  tadpoles.  They may actually swallow
  bits of solid matter, but seem to prefer body fluids of their prey.             Several species of the genus Dactylosternum are predators of crop
  pests.  Dactylosternum dytiscoides
  F., D. hydrophiloides M'Leay and D.
  cycloides Knisch. attack larvae of
  the sugarcane beetle borer, Rhabdocnemis
  obscura Boids., in the
  Philippines.  These species were
  imported to Hawaii during 1925-1926 for biological control.  D.
  abdominale and D. dysticoides were
  imported to Jamaica for biological control of banana borer, Cosmopolites sordida Germ.             Oviposition behavior is
  distinctive because of the silken case within which the eggs of many species
  are contained.  Several more primitive
  subfamilies lay their eggs singly, with little or no covering.  In a few genera, the cases are attached to
  the body of the parent by silken strands, while in others they are enclosed
  in a folded leaf, placed on foliage underneath the water, or float free on
  the surface (Clausen 1940/62).  The
  larvae of many aquatic species are unable to swim, but rather move about by
  crawling along the bottom or on vegetation, and may be found only partially
  submerged.  Larvae of most species
  construct their pupal cases out of the water, near the water line in mud,
  under various objects, or on plants above ground.  Enochrus is reported
  to form its case from floating strands of Spirogyra.             Hydrophilidae have more than 500
  species.  They are cosmopolitan.  Although primarily aquatic beetles, many
  species have terrestrial habits.  Diagnostic
  characters of these are the long and slender maxillary palpi, as long or
  longer than the antennae.  Antennae
  have 6-10 segments with the apical segments shaped into a distinct club.  All the tarsi have the same number of
  segments; the prosternal sutures are distinct; the gular sutures are double
  and the hind coxal craters do not divide the first ventral abdominal segment.             The larvae of Hydrophilidae are
  voracious predators on a variety of insects and other aquatic animals; while
  the adults are scavengers on decaying plant and animal matter (Legner et al.
  1980).   Several species have been
  introduced for biological control with no reported success.             There are 1-2 generations annually, and overwintering
  is as adults (Clausen 1940/62).   = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =   References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Balduf, W. V.  1935.  The Bionomics of Entomophagous
  Coleoptera.  J. S. Swift Co., NY.  220 p.   Bland, R. G. & H. E. Jaques. 1978. How to Know the Insects,
  3rd ed. Dubuque, Iowa: Page 193,Wm. C. Brown Co. 409 p.   Borror, D. J & R. E. White. 1970. A Field Guide to the
  Insects. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. Pages 156-157   Borror, D. J., C. A. Triplehorn, & N. F. Johnson. 1989. An
  Introduction to the Study of Insects, 6th ed. Page 417 Philadelphia: Saunders
  College Publishing. 875 p.   Daly, H. V., J. T. Doyen, & A. H. Purcell III. 1998.
  Introduction to Insect Biology and Diversity, 2nd ed. Page 464 Oxford
  University Press. 680 p.   Legner, E. F., D. J. Greathead & I. Moore.  1980. 
  Population density fluctuations of predatory and scavenger arthropods
  in accumulating bovine excrement of three age classes in equatorial East
  Africa.  Bull. Soc. Vect. Ecol.
  5:  23-44.   Legner, E. F., D. J. Greathead & I. Moore.  1981. 
  Equatorial East African predatory and scavenger arthropods in bovine
  excrement.  Environ. Entomol.
  10(5):  620-625.   Legner, E. F., D. J. Greathead & I. Moore.  1981b. 
  Equatorial East African predatory and scavenger arthropods in bovine
  excrement.  Environ. Entomol. 10(5):  620-625.   Regimbart, M.  1902. 
  Ann. Ent. Soc. France.  p. 158-232.   White, R. E.. 1983. A Field Guide to Beetles of
  North America. Boston: Pages 104-108 Houghton Mifflin Co. 368 p.    |