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Specialized habitats
need to be drought tolerant. There is also the
question of where food comes from, considering
the lack of vegetation.
Beetles that inhabit beaches often obtain their
nutrition indirectly from the sea, feeding on
marine life that has been washed up on the beach.
Whether piles of seaweed or the carcasses of
marine animals, ranging from jellyfish to whales,
most decaying organic matter is attractive to some
beetle scavengers, and often to predatory beetles
that eat the larvae of other insects, particularly
flies, which can be hugely abundant. The sea may
also deposit land vegetation, fruits, drowned land
animals, and driftwood, all of which are exploited
as a food source by some beach-living beetles.
Some beetle species specialize in driftwood, and
have been transported around the world in
floating timber.
The majority of beach-living beetles belong
to the families Carabidae, Staphylinidae,
Histeridae, and Tenebrionidae, though
some smaller families are also
characteristic of beach habitats,
for example the Phycosecidae
in Australia. The inhabitants
of driftwood include
wood-boring Curculionidae
and Oedemeridae. Many
carabids and staphylinids
on sandy beaches also
feed directly on marine
organisms such as
sandhoppers (Crustacea:
Amphipoda). Almost all
SAND
Loose sand is another specialized habitat that
many organisms have failed to colonize, but which
supports a varied range of beetle species. Two
major environments consist largely of sand:
beaches, which may merge into sand dunes, and
deserts. While these two habitats have certain
features in common, there are many differences,
and they are used by different groups of beetles.
Sand, whether on deserts or beaches, contains
little or no organic matter, so plants do not grow
well on it. As a result, there is little shade, and
inhabitants are exposed to the sun and to
predators during the day, unless they can hide
beneath debris or bury themselves. Sand also does
not retain moisture well, so such habitats are
usually very dry. Therefore, beetles that inhabit
any sandy environments, especially desert beetles,
left | Stenocara eburnea (Tenebrionidae)
One of the white, desert-adapted
Pimeliinae, this beetle is from Africa’s
Namib desert.