48
Specialized habitats
called trout stream beetles. They are large water
beetles, 10–15 mm long, represented in the
modern fauna only by the genus Amphizoa, with
five species: three in North America and two in
east Asia. They inhabit clean, well-oxygenated,
rapid-running mountain streams, where adults and
larvae are predators of immature stages of insects
such as caddisflies and stoneflies. The long-lived
larvae of water penny beetles (Psephenidae) cling
to the undersides of rocks in flowing streams,
grazing on algae, and are found in small numbers
throughout the world. They are so called because
their circular larvae resemble small coins. The
small, soft-bodied adults are not aquatic, and live
short lives on streamside vegetation.
Another beetle group that received its common
name from its association with flowing water is the
Elmidae, called riffle beetles. Adults and larvae
live under stones in fast-flowing streams, grazing
on algae and other encrusting organisms. A few
elmid genera, such as the usually rare Stenelmis,
develop as larvae in submerged dead wood at the
bottom of streams and rivers. Several genera of
Elmidae have developed a “plastron,” which
enables them to extract oxygen direct from
water, removing the need to go to the
surface to recharge their air bubble.
Elmidae are much more diverse in
fast-moving water than they are in
ponds or pools, which are preferred
by other water beetle families such
as Hydrophilidae, Dytiscidae, and
Gyrinidae. However, all of those
families also have a few species and
genera that specialize in moving water.
FLOWING FRESH WATER
Like most non-marine habitats, flowing fresh
water such as streams and rivers is home to many
beetles, but fewer than are found in ponds, ditches,
and slower-moving water. There are several
ecological obstacles that keep some beetle genera
and species out of flowing streams. Firstly, most
larvae and adult water beetles need to return to
the surface fairly often to replenish their supply
of air, and in flowing water this exposes them to
the risk of being carried away by the current.
Secondly, the quantity of organic matter, and
so the potential food supply, is usually less in
faster-flowing water. Thirdly, fast-flowing water
has higher levels of oxygen and is able to support
larger populations of fish, many of which will eat
the adult and larval beetles. Despite these hurdles,
a number of families and genera of beetles have
adapted to survive in these environments.
The family Amphizoidae are so closely
associated with fast-flowing streams that they are
left | A typical European riffle beetle
Limnius volckmari (Elmidae), grazing algae
on a submerged rock.