The suborder Myxophaga is the second smallest of the four
Suborders of Coleoptera (after Archostemata) in number of
species. It consists of two superfamilies, Lepiceroidea and
Sphaeriusoidea: the first with just one family, Lepiceridae,
and three species; the second with three families,
Sphaeriusidae, Torridincolidae, and Hydroscaphidae,
and a total of 102 described species. All species are small,
none exceeding 3 mm, and most live in aquatic, semiaquatic,
or hygropetric habitats, such as seepages, wet rocks under
waterfalls, hot springs, and salt marshes. Myxophaga are
rarely common, and although species are found in most
continents, their small size and the rare habitats they frequent
have left them poorly understood and rare in collections.
For such small beetles, Myxophaga have a rather long and
detailed fossil record, suggesting an ancient group that was
more abundant, diverse, and ecologically important in the
geological past. Myxophagan fossils are known back to the
Triassic period, more than 220 million years ago. One of
the earliest fossils was initially mistaken for Staphylinidae,
a much more recent family within the hyperdiverse suborder
Polyphaga, but that placement has now been disputed.
MYXOPHAGA
opposite | Satonius stysi (Torridincolidae) Larva
of this remarkable species, discovered in 2007 on
the Jade Dragon waterfall in Yunnan, China, and
named in 2008 after the distinguished Czech
entomologist Pavel Štys.