ears of corn and other crops, while the
larvae, scavenging in the soil, will feed on seeds
and seedlings. More seriously, they are a veterinary
risk, because livestock grazing in pasture heavily
infested with adults can be poisoned by ingesting
large numbers of the adult beetles.
and neurotoxins found in South American
poison dart frogs. This poison may deter
most predators, but some birds, such as
the hooded pitohui from New Guinea’s
rainforests, also secrete batrachotoxins in
their skin and feathers, to the extent that
researchers have reported numbness and
skin tingling from merely touching live birds.
It is thought that these strange “poisonous
birds” gain their chemical defense from
seeking out and eating the melyrid beetles
opposite | Astylus variegatus on flowers
in Brazil. These excellent pollinators
can occur in huge numbers.
below | Malachius bipustulatus
The Malachite Beetle is a
colorful species commonly found
in summer in flowery meadows
throughout Europe.
right | Carphurus This
soft-winged flower beetle has
short wing cases, and bright
warning colors. This one is
feeding on moth eggs.