be carried long distances on the flying bees,
enabling, for example, these flightless beetles
to colonize islands.
Several Meloidae secrete extremely toxic
compounds as defense, for example the Spanish
Fly—actually a large, metallic green meloid Lytta
vesicatoria—secretes the toxic terpenoid cantharidin,
which is poisonous to vertebrates. In the eighteenth
century it became briefly popular, partly due to
the recommendations of the notorious French
nobleman Marquis de Sade (1740–1814) as a
supposed aphrodisiac, but it is dangerous and
probably ineffective. In fact, some cantharidin-
secreting meloids, for example the genus Epicauta,
can be so harmful if ingested that they are
associated with livestock mortality caused by
grazing in areas where the meloids are abundant.
notes
In some parts of Africa, meloids of the
genus Mylabris can be beneficial to farmers
as their larvae consume the egg pods
of locusts, keeping these serious pest
grasshoppers under control. However, the
adults of the same meloids can be harmful
to the same farmers by defoliating or eating
the flowers from crops such as millet
right | Meloe proscarabaeus A female
of a European Oil Beetle, which will
produce hundreds of triungulin larvae,
only a few of which will ever survive to
become adults.
left | Mylabris The larvae of
this African blister beetle develops
in the egg pods of grasshoppers
buried in the ground.