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~ 5,000 aquatic beetles worldwide
Coleoptera ~ 5,000 aquatic beetles worldwide
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Most live in substrate:
Adults usually leave water temporarily - dispersal. One time - Elmidae (riffle beetles) Several times - Dytiscidae, Hydrophilidae
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Respiration? 1. Self-contained air reserves (Dytiscidae - diving beetle) 2. Transcuticular respiration (gills in larvae) 3. Plastron respiration (adult Dryopidae) 4. Piercing plant tissues (larval Chrysomelidae) Slender antennae Hind coxae extend posteriorly divide first abdominal segment Swimming hairs on legs
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Respiration? 1. Self-contained air reserves (Dytiscids)
2. Transcuticular respiration (gills in larvae) 3. Plastron respiration (adult Dryopidae) 4. Piercing plant tissues (larval Chrysomelidae)
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Respiration? 1. Self-contained air reserves (Dytiscids)
2. Transcuticular respiration (gills in larvae) 3. Plastron respiration (adult Dryopidae) 4. Piercing plant tissues (larval Chrysomelidae) Long toed water beetles Woolly hairs except last abdominal segment Short antennae
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Respiration? 1. Self-contained air reserves (Dytiscids)
2. Transcuticular respiration (gills in larvae) 3. Plastron respiration (adult Dryopidae) 4. Piercing plant tissues (larval Chrysomelidae)
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Varied life histories Some larvae occur year round, adults for short period (Psephenidae) Water pennies Larvae are aquatic, adults terrestrial
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Varied life histories Others occur as larvae and adults year round – Elmidae = riffle beetles Long antennae 5-segmented tarsi Crawl on bottom - do not swim = no swimming hairs on hind legs 5-6 abdominal segments
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Varied life histories Others have long adult; larva only around a few weeks - Hydrophilidae Water scavenger beetles Adult 3 segmented club antennae 5 segmented tarsi Larvae Large mandibles 4 segmented legs
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Scirtidae = marsh beetles
Adults = terrestrial! Scirtidae = marsh beetles Small ( mm) Larvae have long antennae 4-segmented legs, single claw
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Beetle pupae are mostly terrestrial
Under stones or logs Few marine beetles - substrate dwellers
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Larval morphology = diverse
Sclerotized head capsule Mandibles, maxillae, labium Gill-like appendages in some (Gyrinidae = whirligig beetles)
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Coleoptera
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Coleoptera
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Coleoptera
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Coleoptera
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The key 2 compound eyes that appear to be divided = Gyrinidae, whirligig beetles
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Eyes not divided, hind coxae divided into plates that cover abdominal segments 1-2, or 3
Haliplidae, crawling water beetles
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Hind coxae not expanded into plates, divide abdominal segment 1
Dytiscidae, predaceous diving beetles
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Hind coxae not dividing abdominal segment 1, antennae clubbed with cuplike segment at base
Hydrophilidae, water scavenger beetles
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Antennae short with comb-like club, body length 5-6.5 mm
Dryopidae, long-toed water beetles
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Antennae w/o comblike club, body length < 4.5 mm
Elmidae, riffle beetles
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