118
ROUND FUNGUS AND
SMALL CARRION BEETLES
LEIODIDAE
LEIODIDAE
family
Leiodidae
known species
3,700
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica
habitat
Damp places, many species in forests, others
in nests and burrows of larger animals
size
1–7 mm
diet
Fungi, carrion, dead organic matter
notes
The genus Glacicavicola is one of the larger,
stranger, and least known Leiodidae. The
name means “ice cave dweller,” and it lives
in cold lava tubes, wet limestone caves, and
ice caves in the Pacific Northwest of the USA,
scavenging on flying insects that have been
T
he Leiodidae is the second largest family in
the Staphylinoidea, even though at around
3,700 species it is tiny compared to the
hyperdiverse Staphylinidae. Leiodidae
is divided into several subfamilies, and
a large proportion of them have the
eighth segment of the adult antenna
very small compared to the seventh
and ninth, an immediately
recognizable feature despite
the considerable variation of
morphology within the family.
Two main subfamilies are likely to
be found. The domed, shiny subfamily
Leiodinae (round fungus beetles) inhabit
moist, rotting, fungal fruiting bodies, under
bark, on slime molds, and similar situations, and
fly in the evening, when they can be collected by
sweeping a net through vegetation. Many species
are only associated with subterranean fungi, and
are rarely seen. The subfamily Cholevinae (small
carrion beetles) are flatter and more elongated with
longer legs, and are found living as scavengers in the
burrows of mammals and reptiles, or in bird nests,
and on and around carrion. Highly modified
Cholevinae, the tribe Leptodirini, are found in caves,
and have elongated limbs and antennae, and have
often lost their eyes.
Some of the most modified of all leiodids are
the subfamily Platypsyllinae, which live closely
associated with certain mammals, including among
the fur of the animals themselves. The Beaver Beetle