Beetles are the largest order of both the insect and the animal worlds.
Approximately 300,000 species, some 26,000 of which exist in the United
States, have been identified. Every year, however, thousands of new
species are discovered and classified. Beetles are found on every
continent except Antarctica. There is no reason to believe that some of
these highly adaptable creatures do not exist on the somewhat temperate
Antarctic Peninsula. Although most beetles are land animals, some are
aquatic, carrying air bubbles on their legs, which provide them with air
when they are submerged. Most aquatic beetles live in freshwater,
feeding on small fish and tadpoles, although a small number of beetles
live in salt water. Other beetles live largely underground or beneath
the bark of trees, while some species go through their life cycle in
caves and are blind. The remarkable adaptability of beetles, which date
to the Triassic period, has made them one of earth's most enduring
species and accounts for their being found in a broad variety of
geographical locations and climates.
Physical Characteristics of Beetles
With over 300,000 species of beetles cataloged and classified, the
variations within each species are notable. These insects can range in
size from very small to quite large. The fungus beetle is smaller than
the period at the end of this sentence, never growing beyond
one-fiftieth of an inch in length. The Hercules beetle, found in Central
American rain forests, is typically six inches long and often exceeds
that length. Despite variations in size, each species of beetle shares
anatomical characteristics with every other species. All beetles have
three main body parts in common: the head, the thorax, and the abdomen.
The head usually contains the mouth and the eyes, although some blind
cave beetles have no eyes. All beetles have antennae that protrude from
the front of the head and are vital to communication. Blind beetles have
more fully developed antennae than sighted ones. A beetle's mouth
consists of three parts, the frontal mandibles, the maxillae or second
jaw in four or five sections, which is jointed and has palpi (segmented
appendages) on its outer side, and the labium or lower lip, which
resembles the maxillae but has only three sections. In vegetarian
beetles, the jaws point down, whereas in predatory beetles, they point
forward. The thorax is behind the head and consists of three segments.
The first, the prothorax, larger in beetles than in other insects, has
one pair of legs on its underside. The second segment has a second pair
of legs and the elytra, the cutaneous wing covers found in all beetles.
In some species of ground beetles that do not fly, the elytra may be
joined as a single, hard piece of cuticle. The third segment bears the
third pair of legs and the delicate hind wings used for flying by
species that fly. The abdomen, which contains most of the beetle's
internal organs, is behind the thorax. It has nine segments, not all of
which are visible. In most species the abdomen is covered almost
entirely by the second pair of wings, although in a few species, up to
half the abdomen is exposed. In most species, a straight line runs along
the abdomen where the two elytra meet. Regardless of size or species,
all beetles share this basic anatomy. Individual differences, however,
characterize various species. Ground beetles that tunnel into the earth
have short, strong legs with projections that make them efficient
diggers. Predatory beetles have long legs because they must move rapidly
to trap their prey.
The Life Cycle of Beetles
All beetles
pass through four stages of development, called metamorphosis. Life
begins within eggs laid by the female beetle, usually in a protected
place such as beneath a rock, on the underside of a leaf, or inside the
bark of a tree. The females in some species lay up to two thousand eggs
at once, while in other species a single egg is laid. When the eggs
hatch, a small wormlike creature, called a larva or grub, emerges. The
larvae of some species are mobile and have legs, while those of other
species may be legless and can move about only by wiggling. Those with
legs are predatory and move about easily in their quest for food. The
legless larvae usually attach themselves to plants and survive by eating
the leaves. Beetle larvae have huge appetites and frequently are
destructive to crops. Their voracious eating causes them to grow
rapidly, forcing them to shed their old skins, which they outgrow, in a
process called molting. When the larva reaches full size, it enters the
next phase of its metamorphosis by becoming a pupa, sequestering itself
in a safe place where it remains for about a month. Its body changes
drastically as it evolves toward its adult stage. When the pupa cracks,
the adult beetle emerges, its body soft and flexible. Within twenty-four
hours, however, the body hardens and the metamorphosed beetle looks and
acts like other adult beetles. The integrity of the species is
maintained in some types of beetles by the shape of the male sexual
organs which allows them to enter only females of that species. Also,
the white fringed weevils of Argentina and some other beetles are
parthenogenetic, which means that their eggs are not fertilized by a
male. This species is exclusively female. Destructive and Beneficial
Beetles Many species of beetles are destructive, devouring everything in
their paths, ruining crops, devastating forests by attacking the roots
of trees, and wreaking general havoc wherever they exist. Japanese
beetles were particularly destructive to farm crops in New Jersey during
the 1930's. The boll weevil deposits its eggs in vegetables or in the
blossoms of cotton plants. The resulting larvae quickly consume the
plants in which they are hatched. Some types of beetles eat grain and
flour, while the larvae of carpet beetles eat all kinds of fiber. The
predatory nature of some species of beetle can help solve ecological
problems. St. John's wort, also called Klamath weed, is a rapidly
growing plant that annihilates grasses that grow in the places where it
takes hold. It also causes animals that eat it to have sore mouths and
debilitating skin eruptions. When it was discovered that a leaf beetle
the size of a pea would devour this intrusive plant, such beetles were
introduced into the affected areas and within a few years had eradicated
the plant. Ladybugs contribute to agriculture by eating aphids and
other pests from the leaves of plants. In many parts of the Third World,
people depend upon the larvae of beetles to add protein to their diets.
Many folk remedies, including aphrodisiacs and diuretics, are made from
dried beetles. Scarabs and other beetles consume carrion and clear away
dead material that is potentially infectious.
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