fungal spores, with which they inoculate plants to
provide food for themselves or their larvae. Some
such beetles are vectors of fungal diseases of trees.
Oviposition: laying eggs. Female beetles have an
internal ovipositor (egg-laying tube).
Palearctic region: biogeographic region that covers
Europe; western, central, and northern Asia; and
northern Africa.
Parasitoid: organism that develops on or in another
organism, but unlike a true parasite, it kills the host
during development.
Parthenogenesis: nonsexual reproduction.
Parthenogenetic insects such as vine weevils (genus
Otiorhynchus) lay eggs without needing a male. These
eggs hatch into genetic clones of their mother.
Pectinate (of antennae): developed into a series of
long structures like the teeth of a comb.
Pedogenetic: insect able to reproduce while still in
the larval stage, such as Micromalthus (Archostemata).
Phoretic: obtaining transport (but not necessarily
nutrition) by attaching to another organism (such as
phoretic mites on beetles).
Physogastric (of some female beetles): with the
abdomen able to distend greatly, especially when
carrying a large number of eggs.
Phytophagous: eating leaves or living plant tissue,
herbivorous.
Plastron: series of tiny setae that maintain a
permanent air bubble, allowing an insect to breathe
under water without having to renew its air supply
at the surface.
Polyphagous: feeding on many different foods
(usually in beetles on many different genera or
species of plants).
Pronotum: upper part of the prothorax; in an adult
beetle the only part of the thorax visible from above
between the head and elytra. Often simply called
“the thorax,” but this is inaccurate.
Prosternum: lower part of the prothorax, to which
the front legs are attached.
Quinones: complex organic compounds, used by
some beetles for defense.
Relict/Relictual: left behind, or appearing as if left
behind, from a previous time. Seemingly primitive in
form or appearance.
Rostrum: extension of an insect’s head in front of the
eyes and with the mouthparts at the end. An example
is the “beak” or “snout” of weevils (Curculionoidea).
Saprophagous: feeding on dead or decaying matter.
Scutellum: triangular or shield-shaped piece of the
thorax visible from above in some adult beetles, behind
the pronotum and between the bases of the elytra.
Setae (sing. seta): bristles, or hairs, on an insect’s
exoskeleton.
Sister Group: in phylogenetics, the closest
recognized equivalent-rank relative to a given
organism (for example, Sister Species, Sister Genus).
Spiracles: the breathing holes in the exoskeleton
of an insect.
Structural color: color that is formed not by
pigment but by scattering of light by thousands or
millions of microscopic prisms. Found in some beetles,
butterfly wings, for example.
Subcortical: living underneath the bark of trees.
Synanthropic: living with, or associated with,
humans or human-modified areas.
Tarsi: an insect’s “foot,” the last part of the leg,
usually divided into three to five segments called
“tarsomeres.” The claw-bearing segment is referred
to as the “pretarsus.”
Taxonomy: the science of classification of living
organisms.
Temperate zones: regions of the world between the
poles and the tropics, usually marked by four distinct
and clearly recognizable seasons.
Tergites: segments of the abdomen.
Troglophile: organism associated with and able to
live its entire life in a cave.
Xerophilous: inhabiting and able to tolerate dry or
very dry environments.
Xerophytic (of plants): growing in very dry habitats,
usually with adaptations to conserve water, such as
small leaves and aromatic chemical oils.