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PLEASING FUNGUS BEETLES
EROTYLIDAE
E
rotylidae, the pleasing fungus beetles, are
generally a tropical group, with the adults
and larvae feeding together on bracket fungi and
mushrooms. Their greatest diversity occurs in wet
tropical forests, where high rainfall, humidity, heat,
and abundant organic matter result in enormous
fungal growth, and many species of erotylid can
be found together on the short-lived
fruiting bodies of rainforest fungi.
Together with their fungal hosts,
Erotylidae play an important
ecological role as recyclers
of complex chemicals such
as lignin and cellulose
from decaying trees.
Erotylidae also
secrete chemicals
themselves, and their
bright warning colors
show that they are
distasteful to predators.
When threatened, they
“reflex bleed” by secreting
from their joints globules of
offensive fluid, which is repellent to
vertebrates as well as insect predators
such as ants. Like a lot of brightly colored
family
Erotylidae
known species
3,500
distribution
Worldwide but especially in the tropics
habitat
Anywhere that fungi grow, usually in warm,
wet forest habitats
size
1–20 mm
diet
Adults and larvae feed on the fruiting bodies
of various fungi. One group, the Languriinae,
feed inside the stems of living plants
notes
Some Erotylidae, like the South and Central
American genera Pharaxonotha and
Ceratophila, have a completely different
way of life from the others, being pollinators
of a very ancient group of plants called
cycads. They look unlike other erotylids,
and probably resemble the ancestral
EROTYLIDAE —Pleasing Fungus Beetles
below | Erotylus Members of
this genus are some of the most
colorful and conspicuous beetles
likely to be seen while walking in
the jungles of South America.