170
SHIP TIMBER BEETLES
LYMEXYLOIDEA
T
he superfamily Lymexyloidea is represented
today by only a single family, Lymexylidae.
The world fauna includes only a few genera and
species, and these are often rare. Evidence shows
that they were more common in the geological
past, with a number of fossils known from
Cretaceous amber, 100 to 120 million years old.
The beetles are wood borers, particularly
associated with standing dead wood such as
lightning-struck trees. This has earned them the
name of ship timber beetles, as the masts of old
wooden sailing ships are effectively standing dead
trees from a beetle’s point of view. They can be
pests, because they bore directly into the heartwood,
damaging the strength of the timber, a particular
problem in the days of sailing ships when infested
weakened masts could snap off in a gale.
The female beetle bores a cylindrical tunnel
directly into the wood at right angles to the trunk,
and there she lays the eggs. Each egg is coated with
fungal spores which the female deliberately carries
in special pouches called “mycangia.” These spores
are then “farmed” by the hatching larvae in their
own branching tunnels. The fungus, often unique
to a species of beetle, thrives in the dark humid
network of holes, which are kept open by the
beetles to ensure a supply of oxygen. This is an
example of symbiosis, where the two organisms,
the beetle and the fungus, are mutually dependent.
The fungus is carried by the beetles from tree to
tree and cultivated in their tunnels, where it
provides a source of food for the larvae.
LYMEXYLOIDEA—Ship Timber Beetles
superfamily
Lymexyloidea
known species
70
distribution
All continents except Antarctica, but
generally rare. One or two species are
common in tropical Africa
habitat
Forests, from northern conifer forests to
tropical rainforests. Larvae usually develop
in dry, dead trunks
size
10–50 mm
diet
Larvae feed on symbiotic fungi inoculated
into tunnels in wood by the female. Adult
feeding is not known, and possibly many
species do not eat as adults
left | Lymexylon navale The name
refers to the navy and the former
association with ships’ masts. This
is now a rare species in Europe and
western Asia.