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OIL BEETLES AND BLISTER BEETLES
MELOIDAE
T
he Meloidae, a widespread group of
Tenebrionoidea, have some of the most
intricate life histories of any beetles. In the genus
Meloe, for example, the female lays hundreds of
eggs that quickly hatch into small active larvae
called “triungulins,” which climb up onto flowers,
where they wait for a pollinating insect to arrive. If
the pollinator is a solitary bee of the correct species
(the host species of the Meloe beetle in question),
they will climb onto it and be carried back to its
nest, where they will kill the egg or larva of the bee
and feed on the supplies that have been stored for
the bee larva’s development. During this process
they molt into a large helpless larva that is entirely
dependent on the food stored by the bee. If the
triungulins attach to the wrong species of bee, or to
a wasp or beetle, they will probably starve to death,
so the Meloe depends on large bee populations of
the correct species in order to survive. As a result,
they are never common, but their triungulins may
family
Meloidae
known species
3,000
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica, especially in
warm, dry places
habitat
Most habitats, but most common in savanna
with abundant potential hosts
size
10–60 mm
diet
Larvae may be “kleptoparasites,” killing
a host larva and feeding on the supplies
provisioned for it. Others feed on
grasshopper egg cases. Adults feed
on nectar, or flowers or small leaves
MELOIDAE—Oil Beetles and Blister Beetles
right | Horia debyi
This striking
species from the
Asian tropics, in
this case Borneo,
develops in the
nests of Carpenter
Bees (Xylocopa spp.)