The Beetles
If
every animal and plant on the planet were lined up in a row, every
fifth would be a beetle, and every tenth a weevil (one family of
Beetle)! Beetles represent one fifth of all living organisms and a
staggering one quarter of all animals. When asked what
could be inferred from a creator, the eminent scientist J.B.S. Haldane
replied "a great fondness for beetles!"
Using sheer numbers as a criterion
for success, beetles are the most successful animals on Earth. If a
single example of every plant and animal species were placed in a row,
every fifth species would be a beetle.
By
the most conservative estimate, approximately 350,000 species of
beetles have been described since 1758. That's an average of slightly
more than four per day. Of the 27,000 species of insect in Britain,
beetles are our third largest order with between 3,900 and 4,500
species.
Beetles, the largest group of insects, representing a
fifth of all living organisms and a fourth of all animals, epitomise
diversity. Nearly every biological strategy used by terrestrial animal
life is represented in this remarkable group of animals.
The
sheer size differences exhibited by beetles is phenomenal: the smallest
species is less than a few millimetres long, whilst the largest beetle
species, the Goliath Beetle is over 20cm in length. A large dung beetle
in flight can be quite a dangerous critter: there have been many
instances of a helmet-less motorcycle rider colliding with one, and the
beetle actually knocking the human out cold!

Beetles
are the order of insets known as the Coleoptera. Aristotle described
and named them from the Greek koleon, "sheath", and pteron, "wing". This
refers to their hard outer wing cases known as elytra. Beetles have 2
pairs of wings, and the elytra fold down to protect the delicate pair of
membranous wings underneath. Many people do not realise that he
majority of beetles can fly, and the loss of flight is a secondary
evolutionary characteristic.
Beetles are not dangerous to humans:
they carry no diseases and do not sting. The Blister Beetle does let
off ...acid if distressed, which does burn human skin and a Longhorn
beetle can bite through a pencil with one quick snap of its hugely
powerful jaws, but with care and respect, a beetle will not harm a
human...unless you let your little finger get to close to a Longhorn beetle's
jaws...
Beetle Links
Collecting
Recording
Curation
Identification Guide
Literature