Wikijunior:Bugs/Predaceous Diving Beetle
What does it look like?
editPredacious diving beetles belong to the Order Coleoptera and the Family Dytiscidae. Thermonectus is their species name.
They are aquatic beetles having a streamlined convex body. They are smooth and shiny—usually 1/8 to 1 inch long. Most species are dark brown or black in color. Some have distinctive patterns of spots, lines or mottling on the elytra (wing covers). They have filiform (thin and hairlike) antennae. Their flat hind legs are fringed with hairs to help them swim in water. The tarsi (hind legs) have claws at the end. Larvae are long with well-developed legs and large curved mandibles (jaws).
Acilius semisulcatus is a medium-sized predacious diving beetle with a black-margined square on the yellow prothorax. There are curved bands crossing the back of the elytra. Predacious diving beetle larvae are called “water tigers.” They are shaped like a rounded rod tapering toward each end. They have long curved mandibles. There are openings on the back end for getting air at the water surface. They can also breathe through their skin or long gills in the abdomen.
Where does it live?
editThere are about 3500 Predacious diving beetle species worldwide and about 500 in North America. Different species live in a variety of aquatic habitats. Shallow, weedy ponds are good places to find them. They are also found in streams, lakes, ponds, and puddles. Sometimes they are found in salt water ponds. They do not live in fast-moving water.
Adults and larvae can be seen in spring, summer and fall. Adults of some species move to deeper lakes in the winter, where they remain active under the ice.
What does it eat?
editAdults and larvae are predators of other insects. They eat frogs, toads, salamanders and small fish. The larvae, called “water tigers,” have fierce appetites. They use their large, needle-like mandibles to inject digestive enzymes into prey to dissolve body tissue. The liquid is then sucked up through channels in the larvae’s jaws.
Giant Diving Beetles are members of the Predacious diving beetle family. They belong to the genus Dytiscus. They are voracious aquatic predators that often take prey as large as or larger than themselves.
How does it defend itself?
editPredaceous diving beetles are prey to birds and mammals. They are slow moving when on land, but in water they are fast swimmers. They are able to move through the water and quickly dive to avoid predators.
Larvae are smaller and hard to catch because of their fast movement. In a small pond, they may be at the top of the food chain without predators.
What stages of metamorphosis does it go through?
editPredaceous diving beetles undergo complete metamorphosis. They grow from an egg to a larva, then to a pupa, and finally to an adult.
Females cut slits in water plants to lay their eggs inside stems. Development time for many species is unknown. Larvae pupate in cells dug into wet soil under logs or rocks near the water. The soft-bodied, pale (teneral) adults stay inside their pupal cells to harden before emerging after the final molt.
What special behavior does it exhibit?
editTo swim, predaceous diving beetles move their hind legs simultaneously (at the same time) rather than alternately (one at a time). They hold the tip of the abdomen up to the water surface to obtain air. When they are under water, they breathe using stored air under the elytra.
Adults leave the water at night to fly around. They use the moon to navigate. In populated areas, they are attracted to porch lights, street lights and gas station lights.
How does this bug affect people?
editPredaceous diving beetles are beneficial because they eat harmful insects. They are capable of biting, but are generally harmless to people.
They become a nuisance when too many fly around bright lights where people live and work.
They are sometimes harmful in fish hatcheries because they eat young fry (newly hatched fish).
References
editBorror, D. J. & White, R. E. (1970). A field guide to insects of America north of Mexico. New York, NY: Houghton Mifflin Company.
Marshall, S. A. (2006). Insects and their natural history and diversity. Richmond Hill, Ont: Firefly Books.
McGavin, G. C. (2000). Insects, spiders and other terrestrial arthropods. New York, NY: Dorling Kindersley Inc.
http://www.royalalbertamuseum.ca/natural/insects/bugsfaq/diving.htm
http://insects.tamu.edu/fieldguide/bimg133.html