genus Anthribus is one of the few examples of
a carnivorous weevil, as adults and larvae are
predators and parasitoids of scale insects
(Hemiptera: Coccoidea) and their eggs.
However, the majority of Anthribidae are
associated as adults and larvae with fungi or with
fungoid dead wood, and they can be abundant in
tropical forests throughout the world. A smaller
number of species can be found in temperate
woodlands, but they are almost entirely forest
insects. Most species are patterned in gray, brown,
and white, breaking up their outline and making
them difficult to see. Several species can run and
fly rapidly when disturbed.
above | Habrissus ramosus
This large-eyed and
fast-moving fungus weevil
from tropical Asia was
described as new for science
as recently as 1997.
opposite | Platystomos albinus A fungus weevil
from northern Europe, with a brown and
white pattern that resembles a fleck of fungoid
bark or possibly a bird dropping.
below | Euparius A nocturnal
fungus weevil of the Brazilian
Atlantic Forest. Many
Neotropical fungus beetles
share this speckled pattern.