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<cucujid.htm> [For educational purposes only] Glossary <Principal Natural Enemy Groups> <Citations> <Home> |
COLEOPTERA, Cucujidae (= Passandridae) -- <Images> & <Juveniles> Please refer also to the following link for
details on this group: Cucujidae: Link 1 Description Prostomidae (=
Passandridae).-- The Prostomidae are often included with the Cucujidae. Several species of this small group have
the entomophagous feeding habit, which has developed in some cases into an
obligate parasitism. Catogenus rufus F. larvae are true
external parasitoids of the pupae of certain cerambycid borers and of those
of the braconid parasitoids attacking the same hosts (Fiske 1905). Scalidia
is also known to develop parasitically (Clausen 1940/62) These insects are
sometimes called flat bark beetles are a family of distinctively flat
beetles found worldwide under the bark of dead and live trees. The family
consists of about 40 species in four genera. They have elongated
parallel-side bodies ranging from 6 to 25 mm in length. Most are brown
colored, while others are black, reddish or yellow. Heads are triangular in
shape, with filiform antennae of 11 antennomeres, and large mandibles. The
pronotum is narrower than the head.
Both larvae and adult live under the bark, otherwise little is known
of their habits. The family was formerly larger, with subfamilies
Laemophloeinae, Silvaninae, and Passandrinae (and some tenebrionoid genera
mixed in), but recent revisions have raised the subfamilies to family status. These "flat bark beetles" show diverse food
habits, and many species live in grain and grain products. The cosmopolitan Cryptolestes ferrugineus Steph. utilizes whole or milled grain,
but sometimes it attacks other insects or is a scavenger (Sheppard
1936). A high oviposition rate was
found in females that had fed only on the eggs of the angoumois grain
moth. Larval development was most
rapid when insect food was available.
Many species are completely predaceous and attack wood-inhabiting
Coleoptera, mainly Scolytoidea, while some are also phytophagous. Some species feed on termites (Clausen
1940/62) and mites. Species of Catogenus are parasitic in Braconidae
(Borror et al. 1981). = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = References: Please refer to <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
may be found at: MELVYL
Library] Arnett, R. H., Jr., M. C. Thomas, P. E. Skelley
& J. H. Frank (eds.). 2002. American
Beetles, Vol II: Polyphaga:
Scarabaeoidea through Curculionoidea.
CRC Press LLC, Boca Raton, FL, Dillon, E. S. & L. Dillon. 1961. A Manual of Common Beetles of Eastern
North America. Peterson & Co. Thomas, M. C. "Cucujidae", in Ross H. Arnett, Jr. and Michael C.
Thomas, American Beetles (CRC Press, 2002), vol. 2 |