move because of the heaving mass of beetles
underneath them.
Members of Ceratocanthinae are not carrion
feeders, but live in the leaf litter on the forest floor.
They are distinctive for their ability to roll
themselves into a ball, called “conglobation.”
The head, thorax, and abdomen, as well as
small plates on the legs, are involved in this
process, the result of which is an almost
perfect smooth-sided spheroid, sometimes
camouflaged and sometimes glossy metallic.
These spheroids are difficult for a predator
such as a bird or an ant to grip or pick up. All
Ceratocanthinae can roll up into balls in this way,
except a few rare, poorly known Neotropical genera
such as Ivieolus and Scarabatermes, which have evolved
a different shape, probably from living with termites.
notes
Ceratocanthines conglobate, or roll up
into a ball, as a defense mechanism, but it
doesn’t always save them from being eaten.
Specimens of undigested ceratocanthines
were found inside the stomach of a toad
specimen in the Natural History Museum’s
collection in London, collected over
100 years ago. It was only by identifying
the beetles that scientists could find out
where the toad was from, because it was
incorrectly labeled
above | Eusphaeropeltis This glossy,
spherical Malaysian ceratocanthine is
difficult for a predator to pick up, and
resembles a water droplet.
opposite | Phaeochrous A typical
carrion-feeding Hybosorinae, from
Australia.
right | Madrasostes variolosum This
ceratocanthine from Singapore has
a rough texture, and resembles a seed
or animal dropping.