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Beetle feeding habits
specialize on carrion need powerful senses to
detect it and good mobility in order to get to it
quickly. Usually they are attracted by the smell of
decay, which means that bacteria and fungi are
already established on the carrion. Some carrion
beetles, for example Silphidae, treat the carrion
on arrival with antibacterial and antifungal
secretions to discourage microbial growth and
keep it fresh for use by their own larvae. Many
carrion beetles also carry on their bodies phoretic
(that is, hitchhiking, nonparasitic) mites, which
are flightless and use the beetles as a vehicle to get
to the carrion. They then benefit the beetles by
DEAD ANIMAL TISSUE
Beetles are often called “recyclers” or “nature’s
cleanup crew” because so many of them play a
role in consuming or generally clearing up dung,
dead plants, and animals. However, the whole
concept of “ecosystem services” is somewhat
anthropocentric. The beetles are not serving a
preordained useful function but are simply taking
advantage of a nutritious resource. The fact that
we should be grateful for this, and may actually
depend on this recycling of nutrients for our
continued existence, is purely fortuitous.
Of the dead materials that different groups of
beetles feed on, decaying animal matter is one
of the most digestible and, like dung, is thinly
distributed in the environment. Beetles that
below | Dermestes maculatus (Dermestidae) Larvae of this
hide beetle are used to clean the flesh from a vole skull for
a vertebrate collection at University of California, Berkeley.