ARCHOSTEMATA—Archaic Beetles
84
suborder
Archostemata
known species
40
distribution
Scattered distribution with a few species
known from all continents except Antarctica
habitat
Mainly in forest habitats, in and around
living and fallen trees
size
2–30 mm
diet
Larvae of most species, where the larval diet
is known, feed on fungi in dead wood or
roots. Adults may feed on pollen or tree sap,
but in some cases hardly feed at all
notes
The only known living species of
Micromalthidae is probably common
in North America, and has spread to
ARCHOSTEMATA
T
he few species of Archostemata that remain
in the world today closely resemble fossils
found in stone and amber from hundreds of
millions of years ago, showing that they have
changed little since the Paleozoic era. Of the five
living families of these ancient relicts, three are
now relatively well known: the small and rather
bizarre Micromalthidae and the larger Cupedidae
and Ommatidae.
Micromalthidae, tiny, wood-feeding beetles from
North America, have one of the strangest life cycles
ARCHAIC BEETLES
in the animal kingdom. They have ‘pedogenetic’
larvae, that is larvae that are themselves able to
produce more larvae as offspring. The secondary
larvae then eat their way out of the mother larva,
before molting and developing into other mother
larvae and fertilizing themselves—or, rarely,
pupating and becoming an adult. The adults
are an evolutionary dead end, as they apparently
have no functioning reproductive organs.
Cupedidae and Ommatidae, families quite
similar to each other, lack the peculiarities of