176
SOFT-WINGED FLOWER BEETLES
MELYRIDAE
T
he family Melyridae is called soft-winged
flower beetles because the elytra, in many
beetles one of the hardest parts of the body, are not
very sclerotized; in fact, the whole exoskeleton is
quite flimsy. They were combined with the soldier
beetles (Cantharidae) and some other superficially
similar families in a group called Malacoderms
(meaning “soft skinned”), but these families were
found not to be closely related.
Adult Melyridae are short-lived, and are often
brightly colored in red, yellow, and metallic green,
warning of their potential toxicity. Several species,
especially in the subfamily Malachiinae, have
colorful sacs along the sides of the body, which they
inflate as a threat display when disturbed, sometimes
combined with a smell. Like many beetles that have
chemical protection from predation, they feed
openly on flowers and vegetation during the day.
While most are harmless or beneficial, a few
species can reach pest proportions, a striking
example being the Spotted Maize Beetle Astylus
atromaculatus from southern South America. This
yellow and black spotted beetle is a good pollinator,
and at moderate densities may be useful to
agriculture. However, especially outside of its native
range, it can develop huge populations, at which
point the hungry beetles will eat flowers and damage
family
Melyridae
known species
6,000
distribution
Worldwide
habitat
Common in most habitats, from
semideserts to lakesides, even on
beaches on the strandline
size
1–10 mm
diet
Some are predators, others feed on flowers
as adults, and may be important pollinators.
Larvae are scavengers and predators in soil,
leaf litter, or dead wood
notes
The brightly colored New Guinean melyrid
genus Choresine is remarkable for producing
batrachotoxins, the same powerful cardio-
MELYRIDAE—Soft-Winged Flower Beetles