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WATER SCAVENGER BEETLES
HYDROPHILIDAE
HYDROPHILIDAE
family
Hydrophilidae
known species
3,400
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica
habitat
Many species are common in and around
wetland habitats, especially in slow-moving
fresh water with muddy banks, and in decay
situations such as dung, compost, and fungi
size
1.5–55 mm
diet
Larvae of some genera are predators. Adults
feed on a range of decaying organic matter
and some vegetation
T
he Hydrophilidae, known as the water
scavenger beetles, are the second-most
species-rich group of aquatic beetles after the
Dytiscidae, and can be found in freshwater bodies,
especially weedy, slow-moving waters with muddy
banks, throughout the world. In contrast to
Dytiscidae, most hydrophilids are not very powerful
swimmers, and many species spend much of their
time clinging to water plants. They are called
“water scavenger beetles” because adults of
most species are detritivores feeding on
dead plant matter, rather than active
predators like the dytiscids. The
larvae, on the other hand, often
feed on other invertebrates, with
several species being specialized
consumers of water snails.
Adults collect air from
the water surface, which they
usually carry as a bubble on
the underside of the abdomen.
Hydrophilids can be distinguished
from dytiscids by their shape, which
is less streamlined and usually widest
toward the back, rather than the
characteristic oval shape of the diving beetles,
below | Berosus signaticollis One of
the exceptions to the “crawling” rule:
from Europe, it is a fast and powerful
swimmer.