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NET-WINGED BEETLES
LYCIDAE
T
he Lycidae are medium-sized, brightly
colored, and usually slow-moving beetles,
often found on trees and feeding from flowers in
forested areas. While they would appear to be
vulnerable, they are protected from predators by
their warning coloration, which indicates that they
are distasteful or toxic. When the net-like veins on
their soft elytra are bent or broken, it triggers the
release of a range of chemicals that often cause the
predator to reject the lycid, and thereafter to avoid
similarly colored insects. These well-defended
beetles have become models for other insects that
mimic their bright warning coloration and so gain
protection, even though in many cases they lack
the defensive secretions themselves. Different
lycid genera adopt different patterns of warning
coloration, usually involving red, yellow, metallic
blue, and black.
LYCIDAE—Net-Winged Beetles
family
Lycidae
known species
4,600
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica, most
abundant and species-rich in the tropics
habitat
Forest habitats, from light woodlands to
tropical rainforests
size
2–40 mm
diet
Larvae are predatory, feeding on snails,
worms, insect larvae, as well as other
invertebrates. Many adults feed on nectar,
while others retain the larval diet, and some
do not feed at all for their short adult life