and unfurl their antennae, reading the wind
to find out where the nearest females are.
If humans could imitate the scent-detecting
apparatus or these beetles, we could design
more effective equipment to detect minute
quantities of explosives or toxins
above | Dascillus davidsoni (Dascillidae)
A fully winged male from western North
America. In contrast, the female has full
elytra but shortened flight wings.
below | Sandalus niger (Rhipiceridae) A
male of the Cedar Beetle, a widespread
cicada parasite in eastern USA and
southeast Canada.
often occur in places where orchids do not.
Some Dascillidae, like the North American
Anorus and north African Emmita, live in desert and
semidesert environments. Flightless females remain
in the larval burrow and produce pheromones to
attract flying males. In some genera, females are
still unknown, but these are assumed to be flightless
and subterranean.