164
SOLDIER BEETLES
CANTHARIDAE
T
he medium-sized family Cantharidae are
called soldier beetles because the bright
colors of the adults of many common European
species were thought to resemble historical
military uniforms. Sometimes the name “sailor
beetles” is used for species with elytra that are
colored blue or black rather than red or orange.
The whole exoskeleton of these beetles, including
the elytra, is weakly sclerotized, giving the adults
a soft, floppy appearance and earning them other
descriptive names such as “leatherwings” and
“squishy beetles.”
In temperate regions, adult beetles have a short
life of a few weeks, when they are easily spotted
during the day among long grass, rough vegetation,
or on flowers, mating or feeding on insects, pollen,
and nectar. They each have a distinct adult season,
with a succession of species appearing through spring
and summer. The rest of the year is spent as a larva.
Larvae are covered in water-repellent setae, giving
them a velvety appearance, and can be abundant
predators in soil, leaf litter, and among roots. Larvae
of some genera such as Malthodes inhabit rotting
wood, including dead twigs on living trees.
CANTHARIDAE—Soldier Beetles
family
Cantharidae
known species
5,100
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica. Most easily
found, in season, in temperate climates
habitat
Vegetation in fields and plains, marshes,
lakeside reedbeds, and forests. Some
species live under stones in high mountains
near the snow line
size
2–30 mm
diet
Pollen, nectar, and small insects. Many
cantharids feed openly on flowers, eating
nectar, pollen, and parts of the flower itself,
as well as other pollinating insects