The huge suborder Polyphaga, with over 340,000 named
species, accounts for almost 90 percent of known beetles,
sorted into 16 superfamilies and 156 families. Polyphaga
means “eating many things,” and this is probably one of
the secrets of the group’s extraordinary evolutionary success.
Members of Polyphaga occupy such a broad range of
ecological niches, from feeding on living plants, to dung,
to parasitism, to dead plant and animal matter, to predation.
Apart from their near-complete absence from marine
environments, there is almost no ecological niche that
is not used by members of Polyphaga, and they can be
found from the hottest deserts to well into the Arctic Circle.
The Polyphaga suborder seems to have arisen in the Permian
period, more than 250 million years ago, although such
ancient fossils are often fragmentary and difficult to interpret.
Reliable fossils of many Polyphagan families are known from
the Cretaceous period, but maybe because of the spread of
amber-producing trees, leading to much better preservation
of insect fossils. However, there is no question that the
Coleoptera suborder Polyphaga dominates terrestrial
ecosystems today.
POLYPHAGA
opposite | Sternotomis chrysopras (Cerambycidae)
Named after the green gemstone chrysoprase, this
African longhorn beetle has dramatic mandibles,
but feeds on woody vegetation.