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WHIRLIGIG BEETLES
GYRINIDAE
GYRINIDAE—Whirligig Beetles
family
Gyrinidae
known species
1,000
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica
habitat
Still, fresh water such as ponds and lakes,
as well as slow-moving rivers and streams.
Some species live in brackish water such
as rock pools
size
3–15 mm
diet
Larvae are active hunters below the water,
while adults generally feed on drowned and
drowning insects that have become trapped
in the surface tension
T
he Gyrinidae is a small family of fewer than
1,000 species of small-sized beetles, found
throughout the world, including Europe and North
America. Despite their small size, they are well
known and conspicuous, as adults can be seen in
large numbers on the surface of still or slow-flowing
water, moving in a very rapid, erratic, seemingly
random motion, which has earned them the name
“whirligigs,” after old-fashioned spinning-top toys.
They are predators, hunting on the surface tension
of the water, and are constantly “reading” the
ripples, which alert them to the presence of
drowning insect prey.
Whirligigs are remarkable for having the eyes
of the adults divided, one half observing the air
above, the other watching for danger in the water
below. They give the appearance of having four eyes,
below | Gyrinus A European whirligig beetle on
the surface tension, showing the upper part of the
divided eyes and flaplike back pairs of legs.