parasitic on the mammals, feeding on their
blood, but it has recently been shown that
they are beneficial to their hosts, and for this
reason are tolerated by the mammals and
not eaten or removed during grooming.
They live on mice, rats, and opossums in
South and Central America and Australia
worms and maggots in order to feed on them with
their strong mandibles.
To make up for the lack of protection from the
elytra, most species have defensive glands at the apex
of the abdomen that produce foul-smelling or
distasteful chemicals, and when threatened they arch
right | Staphylinus Unlike their somber
nocturnal relative the Devil’s Coach
Horse, colorful European Staphylinus fly
readily in bright sunshine.
the body so that the apex of the abdomen is directly
above the head. This stance gives them an alarming,
scorpion-like appearance, as well as lining up the
defensive glands with the powerful mandibles. Some
species are called “cock-tail beetles” because of this
posture. Ocypus olens, the largest species occurring in
Europe, which can be seen in woods and gardens
on damp evenings in late summer in search of slugs
and worms, has earned the rather sinister common
name “Devil’s Coach Horse.”
opposite | Actinus imperialis
Another bright metallic
diurnal forest species, this
time from New Guinea,
where it hunts caterpillars
on the leaves of forest trees.
above | Plochionocerus fulgens
A colorful diurnal species
from the rainforests of South
America, here folding up its
flight wings under its elytra
using a middle leg.