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Expert Pest Control Advice, Identification and Information Beetles |
![]() There are more than 800,000 species of insects on earth, more than all the other plants and animals combined. Of this great number of insects, nearly half are beetles. Unlike other insects, beetles have a pair of leathery protective wings called elytra that cover their membranous flight wings. During flight, the elytra are spread apart and the two flight wings are unfolded and extended. Beetles come in a variety of shapes and colors, from red "ladybugs" and metallic green fig beetles to lightning beetles that glow in the dark and huge horned beetles resembling a miniature rhinoceros. Colorful beetles are used for jewelry and pins, and shiny tropical scarab beetles are strung together to make unusual necklaces. Beetles range in size from less than a millimeter (1/100 of an inch) to tropical giants over six inches long. The largest giants may weigh 40 million times more than their lilliputian relatives. Beetles can be found in almost all habitats, but are not known to occur in the sea or in the polar regions.Many beetle species, including ladybirds and blister beetles, can secrete distasteful or toxic substances to make them unpalatable or even poisonous. These same species often exhibit aposematism, where bright or contrasting colour patterns warn away potential predators. Large ground beetles and longhorn beetles may go on the attack, using their strong mandibles to forcibly persuade a predator to seek out easier prey. Others, such as bombardier beetles (within Carabidae) spray acidic gas from their abdomen to repel predators. |
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Rice Weevil - Sitophilus (= Calandra)
oryzae (Family Curculionidae) |
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Grain or Granary Weevil - Sitophilus granarius
(Family Curculionidae) |
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Drug-store Beetle - Stegobium (= Sitodrepa)
paniceum (Family Anobiidae) |
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Cigarette or Tobacco Beetle - Lasioderma serricorne
(Family Anobiidae) |
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Grain Beetles - Oryzaephilus and Cryptolestes
(= Laemophloeus) species (Family Cucujidae) |
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Flour Beetles - Tribolium, Latheticus
and Palorus (= Caenocorse) species (Family Tenebrionidae) |
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Broad-horned Flour Beetle - Gnathocerus cornutus
(Family Tenebrionidae) |
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Waste Grain Beetle - Alphitophagus bifasciatus
(= A. quadripustulatus) (Family Tenebrionidae) |
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Lesser Mealworm Beetles - Alphitobius species
(Family Tenebrionidae) |
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Mealworm Beetles - Tenebrio species
(Family Tenebrionidae) |
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Cellar or Churchyard Beetles - Blaps species
(Family Tenebrionidae) |
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Khapra Beetle - Trogoderma granarium
(Family Dermestidae) |
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Larder or Bacon Beetle - Dermestes lardarius
(Family Dermestidae) |
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Leather or Hide Beetle - Dermestes maculatus
(= D. vulpinus) (Family Dermestidae) |
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Fur Beetle - Attagenus pellio
(Family Dermestidae) |
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Carpet Beetles - Anthrenus species
(Family Dermestidae) |
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Spider Beetles - Gibbium, Niptus and
Ptinus species (Family Ptinidae) | |||
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Gibbium psylloides |
Niptus hololeucus |
Ptinus fur (male) |
Ptinus fur (female) |
| <<< Back to List | |||
Plaster Beetles - Cryptophagus and Latridius
species (Families Cryptophagidae and Lathridiidae) | |
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Cryptophagus |
Latridius (= Lathridius) |
| <<< Back to List | |
Immature Stages of Domestic Beetles | |||
![]() Drug-store Beetle (Stegobium) Larva1 |
![]() Cigarette Beetle (Lasioderma) Larva1 | ||
![]() Mealworm (Tenebrio) Larva (left) & Pupa (right)2 |
![]() Hide Beetle (Dermestes) Larva2 |
![]() Carpet Beetle (Anthrenus) Larvae2 | |
| Photos: 1Ken Gray Insect Image Collection - OSU ©; 2Jim Kalisch - University of Nebraska-Lincoln © | |||
| <<< Back to List | |||
Control of Domestic Beetles Beetles attacking carpets and fabrics. Control measures for household infestations of domestic beetles that attack carpets, furs and other household fabrics (e.g., Carpet Beetles, Fur Beetles, Leather Beetles, etc.) are the same as those described for Clothes Moths. Beetles attacking grain, flour and other stored food. Control measures for household infestations of domestic beetles that attack dried food products (e.g., Grain Beetles, Flour Beetles, Mealworm Beetles, etc.) are the same as those described for Meal & Flour Moths. Plaster Beetles. These beetles are harmless, but to avoid annoyance every effort should be made to trace and rectify the source of dampness which attracts the beetles and allows them survive. Keeping rooms warm and well aired to remove any trace of mustiness is especially important. Spot treatments with a standard household insecticide for crawling insects can be used as a temporary control measure to reduce any immediate nuisance caused by the beetles, but take care to follow all the instructions on the product packaging and never use insecticides where food is stored, prepared or eaten, or where people (especially children) and pet animals are likely to come into contact with the chemical deposit. REMEMBER TO USE INSECTICIDES SAFELY AND FOLLOW ALL THE INSTRUCTIONS ON THE PRODUCT LABEL |
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