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| COLEOPTERA, Carabidae (Latreille 1810) --  <Images> & <Juveniles>               Carabids include all of the terrestrial Adephaga other
  than trachypachids. This is the largest family of Adephaga, with over 30,000
  described species. Among the more well-known members of the family are the
  genus Carabus (Carabini), bombardier beetles (Brachinini), and tiger beetles
  (Cicindelitae).             Most carabids are predacious. Most of these are
  generalist predators, but there are a number of groups that have become
  specialized (e.g., Peleciini and Promecognathini on millipedes, Cychrini and
  Licinini on snails). A few clades have larvae that are ectoparasitoids on
  other arthropods (e.g., Lebiini, Brachinitae, and Peleciini). Others are
  seed-eaters (e.g., Harpalini).              There are very few derived features that identify
  carabids. In adults, the metacoxae are narrower than other adephagans, with
  the metapleuron extending posteriorly to contact the second abdominal
  sternite. There are also a few minor features in the head structure and
  musculature of larvae (see Beutel, 1995, for a summary).              While carabid phylogeny has been extensively studied,
  the convergences and reversals present in morphological traits has lead to a
  great deal of controversy about many groups. Two of these groups, the tiger
  beetles (Cicindelitae) and wrinkled bark beetles (Rhysodini) are often
  considered outside the carabid clade. The phylogeny shown of carabid tribes
  on this and other pages is a conservative consensus view, in which a large
  number of "basal" groups give rise to a middle and upper grade of
  carabids. Within this latter group is a large, relatively uniform clade, the
  Harpalinae, which includes many of the larger, more common carabids.              There are several enigmatic groups, including
  Gehringiini and Rhysodini, which may be older lineages groups in or they may
  be related to groups within the Carabidae Conjunctae. Their placement, along
  with the resolution of other aspects of carabid phylogeny, awaits further
  analysis of available morphological and molecular data.     References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Arnett, R. H. 
  1968.  The Beetles of the
  United States.  Amer. Ent.
  Inst.  1112 p.   Balduf, W. V.
  1935.  The Bionomics of Entomophagous Coleoptera.  J. S. Swift Co., NY.  220 p.   Jeannel, R. 
  1949. 
  Traite de Zoologie 9: 
  771-1077.   Legner, E. F.,
  R. D. Sjogren & L. L. Luna.  1980.  Arthropod fauna cohabiting larval breeding
  sites of Leptoconops foulki Clastrier & Wirth in
  the Santa Ana River, California.  J.
  Amer. Mosq. Contr. Assoc. 40(1): 
  46-54.   |