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HISTER BEETLES, WATER SCAVENGER
BEETLES, AND RELATIVES
HYDROPHILOIDEA
superfamily
Hydrophiloidea
known species
7,712
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica. Synteliidae
are restricted to a few places in Asia and
Mexico, and Sphaeritidae to the north of the
northern hemisphere
habitat
Hydrophilidae in aquatic habitats or in dung,
Histeridae in decaying plant, fungal, or
animal matter
size
1–55 mm
diet
Histeridae are mainly predators, while
Hydrophilidae adults are scavengers
(many larvae are predators)
T
he superfamily Hydrophiloidea is one of the
smaller superfamilies of Polyphaga, including
only four families, each with fewer than 5,000
known species in the modern fauna. Two of the
families are relatively much larger, and are covered
separately below. These are the water scavenger
beetles Hydrophilidae, a group of aquatic, or in
a few cases, dung-living beetles with around 3,400
species, and the Histeridae, called hister or clown
beetles, with around 4,300 species, most of which
are predators found in decaying plant, fungal, or
animal matter.
The other two families are much smaller, but are
taxonomically interesting because although clearly
related to the Histeridae, they do not have all the
characters that would include them in this family.
These are the Synteliidae, with seven species, and
the Sphaeritidae, with five. Sphaeritidae are from