eating the eggs and small larvae of flies and other
insects that might otherwise compete with the
beetles. The Silphidae genus Nicrophorus, the
burying beetles, will proceed to bury the carrion
if it is small enough, to get it out of the reach of
vertebrate scavengers. They then skin it, lay eggs,
and prepare the buried carcass for their larvae.
Silphidae and several large, carrion-feeding
Staphylininae (Staphylinidae) also produce
chemicals that are deliberately repellent to
mammalian scavengers, to try to prevent the
carrion, together with the silphid eggs and larvae,
being eaten by a larger scavenger.
Carrion at different stages of decay is used
by different groups of beetles. For example,
fresh or slightly decayed flesh may be attractive
to Silphidae, Geotrupidae, Histeridae, and
Staphylinidae, which may feed on either the
carrion itself or on maggots and other
invertebrates that are attracted to it, but there
is a whole spectrum of carrion feeders until the
late stages of decay, when only skin, hair, and
bones remain. These later stages may attract
Nitidulidae, Dermestidae, and Trogidae, which
are basically keratin feeders, and are also found
on carnivore dung filled with undigested hair,
or debris in bird nests consisting of feathers.
Colonies of Dermestidae are kept by museums
to prepare skeletons, as the beetle larvae strip off
all remains of skin and dried muscle, leaving only
the clean bones behind.
In South America, with the extinction of
the ground sloths and other megafauna, many
dung beetle groups have adapted to feeding on
carrion. For example, the giant metallic horned
dung beetles Coprophanaeus ensifer and C. lancifer
(Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae) are almost entirely
necrophagous.
above | Anoplotrupes stercorosus (Geotrupidae) and Nicrophorus
vespilloides (Silphidae) This Dor Beetle and burying beetle
recycle a dead slowworm in a German forest.