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ANTLIKE LITTER BEETLES
STAPHYLINIDAE: PSELAPHINAE
P
selaphinae have a distinctive shape, with
the abdomen bulbous and shortened elytra,
and the head and pronotum narrower than the
abdomen. The majority of species can fly, but
not readily. Even though the elytra are short,
members of the subfamily do not resemble typical
Staphylinidae, which is probably why Pselaphinae
was until recently treated as a family in its own
right, the second largest in Staphylinoidea.
The majority of species of Pselaphinae are small,
about 1.5 mm being an average length. They can
be collected in moss, among roots, in grass tussocks,
and in the leaf litter of the forest floor, sometimes
in large numbers, in both temperate forests and in
the tropics, where the diversity is enormous and
thousands of new species are still to be discovered.
STAPHYLINIDAE: PSELAPHINAE
subfamily
Pselaphinae
known species
10,000
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica
habitat
Damp woodland and grassland, in moss
and leaf litter, or in nests of ants or termites
size
0.5–5.5 mm
diet
Predators; adults and larvae eat mites and
other small invertebrates
notes
Pselaphinae have a rich fossil history, going
back to Lower Cretaceous Spanish amber.
However, no association with ants has been
demonstrated for any Mesozoic fossil. The
earliest known myrmecophile (ant-associate)