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FUNGUS WEEVILS
ANTHRIBIDAE
T
he Anthribidae is one of the most ancient
lineages of weevils, with fossils known from
the Jurassic of Kazakhstan, more than 150 million
years ago, which, in spite of their great age,
quite closely resemble species and genera living
today. Like many of the early weevil groups,
anthribids are characterized by having straight
antennae (without the geniculate knee bend that
characterizes true Curculionidae) and by not
feeding on living plants. Some species have
developed very unusual feeding habits: Araecerus
fasciculatus is a cosmotropical stored-product pest,
frequently attacking stored coffee beans and cocoa
pods in conditions of high humidity. It is probably
digesting fungi, but it does physical damage by
boring into the beans and pods. The European
family
Anthribidae
known species
6,000
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica, but
concentrated in the tropics
habitat
Forests and woodlands
size
2–45 mm
diet
Fungi and fungoid wood, a few species feed
on stored products and even fewer are
predators of scale insects
notes
In some Asian tropical anthribids, such as the
genera Mecocerus and Xenocerus, males
have antennae many times as long as the
body. They are used for mate-guarding, to
detect the approach of another male, as in
some longhorn beetles (Cerambycidae),
which they superficially resemble
ANTHRIBIDAE—Fungus Weevils