a ball, increasing this resemblance. Eucinetidae
includes around 50 usually rare species; they are
able to jump. The last family, Decliniidae, from
the far east of Asia, was discovered in the 1990s;
there are only two known species, of which
little is known.
preserve easily as fossils, so their known
fossil record goes back only as far as
the Cretaceous period. Supposed fossil
Clambidae are known from early
Cretaceous Lebanese amber, and Scirtidae
from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber. It
is likely that Scirtoidea date back to much
earlier, but fossil evidence for this is still
to be discovered
left | Eucinetus morio
(Eucinetidae) This North
American beetle is feeding on
slime molds, on which its
larvae develop.
below | Exochomoscirtes
luteosuturalis (Scirtidae) The
colorful genus from tropical
Asia has large hind legs and
resembles the unrelated flea
beetles (Chrysomelidae).