Archostemata is the smallest of the four suborders of
Coleoptera, with fewer than 50 known living species. It is
an ancient lineage with a rich fossil record dating back at
least to the Triassic, before the age of the dinosaurs, and
living species preserve the simplified appearance of some of
the earliest beetles. Although there are very few species, the
modern fauna has five families, Jurodidae, Micromalthidae,
Crowsoniellidae, Ommatidae, and Cupedidae, but the first
three are each known from only a single living species. Two
of these are among the most mysterious and little-understood
of all insects: Crowsoniellidae was collected only once when
three males were found deep in the soil of Italy in 1973;
Jurodidae are known in the modern fauna from a single
specimen collected in the forests of Sikhote Alin, Russian
Far East. Neither was ever seen again, despite several
expeditions. Other families are better known, but are still
generally rare. Ommatidae, with three genera, Omma,
Beutelius, and Tetraphalerus, is restricted to Australia and
southern South America. Species of Cupedidae, the least rare
of the families, can occasionally be found in all continents
except Europe and Antarctica.
ARCHOSTEMATA
opposite | Tenomerga cinerea (Cupedidae) A typical
member of the ancient family Cupedidae, Tenomerga
cinerea is found, albeit sporadically, in eastern USA
and southern Canada. It has even been observed
on the White House lawn!