Beetles have biting mouthparts, distinguishing
them from true bugs (Heteroptera), which have
a sucking tube. The key difference between beetles
and superficially similar insects such as bugs and
cockroaches is the fact that Coleoptera have
complete metamorphosis, that is they belong to
the division of insects called Holometabola, which
means that they start as an egg that develops into a
larva, a feeding stage, which then becomes a pupa,
out of which emerges the adult, with its wings and
reproductive organs. Cockroaches and true bugs,
both belonging to Hemimetabola, have immature
stages that resemble smaller wingless versions of
the adult, and they never have a pupal stage.
From a taxonomic point of view, beetles are
well defined, and apart from some Carboniferous
fossils it is usually clear what is and what is not
a beetle. The only exception is the small order
Strepsiptera, called twisted-winged parasites.
Males of these small insects have only the
hindwings developed for flight. The rod-like
forewings seem to serve a balancing function.
The female is parasitic, eyeless, and limbless, and
lives between the abdominal segments of another
insect, usually a bee or wasp. Only the abdomen
is visible, so that the males can mate. Strepsiptera
are often considered the closest living relatives
(Sister Group) of beetles, but some scientists have
good reason to consider that they belong well
inside the beetles, in Tenebrionoidea.
below | Poteriophorus (Curculionidae)
A large weevil rearing up in defense.
The larvae develop in rattan palms
in Southeast Asian forests.
PHOTOS BY KENJI KOHIYAMA