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BURROWING GROUND BEETLES
CARABIDAE: SCARITINAE
CARABIDAE: SCARITINAE
subfamily
Scaritinae
known species
1,900
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica. Concentrated
in the tropics and warmer regions of the
southern hemisphere, particularly Africa,
Madagascar, and Australia
habitat
Found burrowing in moist soil, in wet tropical
forests, near rivers, and close to the shores
of lakes or the sea. Some species can be
very common in mangrove swamps or salt
marshes, and others occur in gardens or
agricultural settings, especially rice paddy
fields. A few prefer dry, sandy environments,
including semideserts
size
1.5–65 mm
W
hile most ground beetles are wedge-shaped
and adapted for pushing through light
soil and leaf litter in search of prey, the subfamily
Scaritinae, often called burrowing ground beetles,
have taken this to an extreme. Many species have
cylindrical bodies with large, pointed mandibles,
strong back legs for pushing, and fossorial (adapted
for digging) fore legs, allowing them to lead a
mole-like subterranean way of life. The mandibles
are strong, not just for boring through the soil,
but also for holding onto and crunching on strong
or heavily armored prey such as other beetles,
snails, or large worms. Some scaritines will also
kill and eat vertebrates such as frogs, lizards, or
even small snakes.
Many species of burrowing ground beetles live in
mud at the edges of rivers and streams, or in coastal
salt marshes or mangroves near the sea, and they are