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Specialized habitats
(Hemiptera), skate on the water’s surface, so they
are really inhabitants of the air rather than the
ocean, which is beneath their feet.
Although none have colonized the open sea,
numerous families of beetles have adapted to and
specialized for life on the shoreline, for example
huge numbers of Anthicidae, Staphylinidae,
Ptiliidae, and Histeridae can be found in piles of
rotting seaweed cast up above the high-tide mark,
where they feed on fly larvae or decaying organic
matter. These beetles can survive temporary
immersion, and if dropped into seawater usually
climb onto floating debris or skate on the surface
tension and immediately take flight.
Other groups, particularly Carabidae, are
nocturnal hunters; they shelter under beached
flotsam during the day, and patrol along the
strandline at night for sand hoppers and other
crustaceans or marine worms that have ventured
up onto the beach. These include Eurynebria
complanata, a large and striking, pale yellow and
black inhabitant of Atlantic and Mediterranean
SALT WATER
The open sea is one of the last great habitats that
has never been conquered by beetles, although
beaches, sand dunes, and even the strandline
support a rich and varied beetle fauna. Many
beetles live in fresh water, but these are descended
from land-living ancestors, and the larvae of
almost all freshwater beetles have to leave the
water to pupate on land, even those which then
return to the water as adults. Pupation on land is
probably too difficult and unreliable in marine
environments, where the distance to the nearest
dry land may be enormous and unpredictable.
However, since insects in general are almost
absent from the sea, even those insects that do not
have a pupal stage, the pupation site cannot be
the only reason for the lack of truly marine
beetles. There must be other factors that keep
them out. It is likely that, having evolved and
diversified on land, insects lack physiological
adaptations for life in salt water; also most of the
available ecological niches are already occupied
by crustaceans, which were there first. One of
the only truly offshore oceanic insects, not beetles
but true bugs, the ocean strider genus Halobates
above | Cicindis horni (Carabidae) A rare
semiaquatic beetle of the Salinas Grandes
salt pans of Argentina, which enters the salt
water to hunt for fairy shrimps.