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.
Rice Weevil - Sitophilus (= Calandra)
oryzae (Family Curculionidae)
Typical weevil with a relatively long snout or rostrum projecting forward from the
front of the head and with distinctly elbowed antennae. Brown to almost black in
colour, usually with two paler marks on each wing-case (body 2-3 mm long). Found in
granaries, bakeries and other food stores where it will attack all kinds grain and
cereal products (maize, rye, wheat, millet, etc.) as well as rice.
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Rice Weevil
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Grain or Granary Weevil - Sitophilus granarius
(Family Curculionidae)
Very similar to the previous species, but without pale marks on the wing-cases (body
2-3 mm long). Likewise, it will attack most kinds of stored grain products.
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Drug-store Beetle - Stegobium (= Sitodrepa)
paniceum (Family Anobiidae)
Also known as the Bread or Biscuit Beetle. Dark reddish-brown with obvious longitudinal
striae (impressed lines) on the wing-cases. Body 2-4 mm long, and covered with fine hairs.
Mainly found in bread and other products made with flour, but will also infest a wide
variety of other plant and animal products, including spices and drugs. The larvae are
small white grubs, up to 5 mm long (see below).
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Drug-store Beetle
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Cigarette or Tobacco Beetle - Lasioderma serricorne
(Family Anobiidae)
Small, rather short-bodied beetles, red or pale reddish-brown in colour and covered with
very fine hairs. Wing-cases more or less smooth, lacking obvious striae, and antennae
distinctly serrate (body 2-3 mm long). These beetles can bend their head a long way under
the thorax and curl themselves into a ball. Found in many plant and animal products, but
seems to have a special fondness for tobacco. Generally confined to warm buildings. The
larvae are small white grubs, up to 4 mm long (see below).
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Cigarette Beetle
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Grain Beetles - Oryzaephilus and Cryptolestes
(= Laemophloeus) species (Family Cucujidae)
Small, flat, reddish-brown beetles (body 2-4 mm long), similar in general appearance to
the Flour Beetles described and illustrated below. The two most important pest species are
the Saw-toothed Grain Beetle (Oryzaephilus surinamensis) and the Flat Grain Beetle
(Cryptolestes pusillus). They infest stored grain and other dry food products. The
Saw-toothed Grain Beetle is sometimes found outdoors living under tree bark and in fungi.
It gets its common name from the toothed edges of the thorax, a feature present in many
members of the family but particularly well developed in this species.
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Flour Beetles - Tribolium, Latheticus
and Palorus (= Caenocorse) species (Family Tenebrionidae)
Several species of reddish-brown beetles, all very similar in general appearance to the
Tribolium sp. illustrated opposite (body 2-4 mm long). All are fairly common pests
found in stored grain, flour, bran and other cereal products.
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Flour Beetle (Tribolium)
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Broad-horned Flour Beetle - Gnathocerus cornutus
(Family Tenebrionidae)
Reddish-brown, with a distinctive large tooth on each mandible (jaw), which gives the beetle
a 'horned' appearance (body 3-5 mm long). Like the previous flour beetles, it occurs in stored
cereals and cereal products. Also found outdoors living under the bark of old deciduous trees,
particularly that of elms.
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Broad-horned Flour Beetle
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Waste Grain Beetle - Alphitophagus bifasciatus
(= A. quadripustulatus) (Family Tenebrionidae)
Reddish or black with reddish-yellow and black markings on the wing-cases (body 2-3 mm long).
Can be found in a wide variety of stored food products, but mainly lives in old or damp flour,
mouldy grain and chaff. Also found outside in old, rotting deciduous trees and under mouldy,
decaying vegetation. In some regions it is quite common in stables and cow-sheds.
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Waste Grain Beetle
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Lesser Mealworm Beetles - Alphitobius species
(Family Tenebrionidae)
Entirely black or nearly so, with reddish legs and antennae (body 5-6 mm long). Found in
stored flour, bran and other cereal products. Generally seems to prefer old food stuffs
that are mouldy or otherwise damaged.
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Lesser Mealworm Beetle
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Mealworm Beetles - Tenebrio species
(Family Tenebrionidae)
The adult beetle is shown at the top of this page. Entirely black
or brownish-black (body 12-18 mm long). A common pest in stored flour, bran and other
cereal products. Sometimes found outdoors in the nests of birds and in old, hollow trees.
Single individuals found in the house are likely to have flown in through an open window
or door, since in the evenings they are attracted by lights. If present in numbers,
however, their breeding place is probably in the house and should be traced. The larvae,
commonly known as 'mealworms' (see below), are easy to rear, and
they are bred commercially in the pet trade as food for various small animals.
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Mealworm Beetle
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Cellar or Churchyard Beetles - Blaps species
(Family Tenebrionidae)
These large beetles are entirely dull black in colour, with a distinctive tail-like
extention of the wing-cases (body 20-30 mm long). They live in dark places in and
around houses and other buildings, typically in kitchens, cellars, sheds, stables and
barns, but may also occur in roof spaces where birds have been nesting. The beetles
feed on any spilled or waste animal and vegetable matter, including badly stored grain,
bran and other cereal products. When disturbed, these beetles have the interesting
habit of adopting a sort of 'headstand', by extending the hind-legs and pushing
against the ground, so tilting the whole body with tail-end upwards. If the disturbance
continues, they can squirt a smelly, yellowish-brown fluid from the raised tip of
the abdomen, sometimes to a distance of several centimeters. This fluid contains
quinones, which are powerful skin irritants and provide the beetles with an effective
defence mechanism to repel would-be predators.
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Cellar Beetle
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Khapra Beetle - Trogoderma granarium
(Family Dermestidae)
Yellowish-brown, head and thorax usually darker than the wing-cases (body 2-3 mm long).
Only found in very warm buildings, mainly associated with stored grain and cereal
products. A common pest in the malting silos of breweries.
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Khapra Beetle
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Larder or Bacon Beetle - Dermestes lardarius
(Family Dermestidae)
Black, with a broad, wavy, yellowish-white or greyish band across the wing-cases broken
by several black marks. Body 7-10 mm long, and covered with fine hairs. Will attack various
products of animal origin in homes and warehouses, including bacon and other fatty meats.
Sometimes found in the nests of birds and rodents, as well as on dry animal hides, carcasses
and other animal matter. Old birds' nests in the roof spaces and eaves of buildings can be a
source of infestation and should be removed. When the larvae (see below)
are ready to pupate, they often chew pupation-holes in wood, cork, paper, textiles, mortar and
even soft metals, especially lead, and may cause considerable damage to these materials.
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Larder Beetle
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Leather or Hide Beetle - Dermestes maculatus
(= D. vulpinus) (Family Dermestidae)
Resembles the previous species but lacks the distinctive greyish band - instead, the whole
body is covered with greyish hairs (body 6-10 mm long). Generally more common and widespread
than the Larder Beetle, but otherwise has similar habits.
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Fur Beetle - Attagenus pellio
(Family Dermestidae)
Blackish-brown with two white spots on its back. Body 4-6 mm long, and covered with fine
hairs. The larval stages can do severe damage to skins, furs, carpets, old blankets and
the like. Also found in corn mills and grain stores.
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Fur Beetle
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Carpet Beetles - Anthrenus species
(Family Dermestidae)
Several very similar species, more or less round in shape and covered with patches and stripes
of whitish-yellow scales. These scales sometimes get rubbed off and the beetles appear dull
black in colour (body 2-4 mm long). When disturbed these beetles pull their legs close beneath
the body and remain motionless. Will attack furs, carpets and all kinds of woollen textiles.
The commonest pest species in Britain is the Varied Carpet Beetle (Anthrenus verbasci),
well known as a domestic pest, particularly in southern England. The adults are frequently
found outdoors on flowers, feeding on pollen and nectar. Another species, the Museum Beetle
(Anthrenus museorum), is sometimes a pest in museums where it can be very destructive
to animal and insect collections. The larvae of Carpet Beetles and other dermestids are covered
with long hairs and are commonly known as 'woolly-bears' (see below).
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Carpet Beetle

Carpet Beetle Larva
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