Sca Cet Cre: Lissomelas flohri Bates 1889 |
This photo of the type specimen curated at the British Natural History Museum was posted for me on flickr. Many thanks to the curators for their help!
Photo: Hillary B. Warner NHM |
A guest at Fred Skillman's Beetle Bash in early July mentioned that he watched Lissomelas cruising the road in front of the Madera Canyon Lodge that morning.
Charles O'Brien found a whole series of very fresh dead ones after watching them cruise the parking lot of Kitt Peak. These fresh ones had a big patch of velvet on their elytra. The total, traceless lack.of this feature made me doubt my initial identification of Doug's beetle until Bill Warner checked the picture above.
CW O'Briens's specimen with velvty spot on the elytra |
I have often watched our tiny local fire ants grab half inch-sized scarabs that tumble down after blundering into the wall at the porch-light. The giants have no chance against those Lilliputian armies. In that case it means certain death for the beetle.
Solenopsis xyloni (Southern Fire Ant) tackles a small aphodine Scarab |
Cremastocheilini - Anteater Scarab Beetles make use of their own of this ant behavior. In Arizona, they fly after the first monsoon rains until they find a fitting ant hill (species specific association, I think). They drop like dead and the ants will come running to grab the easy "prey" and carry it into their nest. But these beetles are uniquely protected.
They pull down the lid that covers their heads (including antennae and mouth parts) like a soldier in a tank in battle mode. Ants dismember their prey by pulling off the legs, but here they find few spines or texture to grab onto. No exposed membranes to place a paralyzing sting- the sclerites of these beetles are a tight-fitting armor. Some sacrifice of leg flexibilty is noticeable. Once in the nest, the pitted bodies of most species of Cremastocheilus seem to absorb the ant's odor while also producing pheromones of their own from Thoracic glands to pacify the hosts. The velvety patch on the elytra of Lossomelas may serve a similar purpose. Supposedly the adult Cremastocheilus feed on ants and their brood. They lay their eggs in the ant nest and the beetle larvae feed on decaying plant material that the ants have discarded at the nest entrance.
The position and reduced size of the mouth parts of Lissomelas flohri make me wonder whether this species feeds much at all as adult. Lissomelas has not been found in any ant nests and the biology of this mostly Mexican beetle is still largely unknown Scarabaeus 11/1980
Baubo Bittern on flickr:
ReplyDeletet certainly got legs like something from Playmobil.... :)
It is not the first insect to be a breeding parasite of ants. Maculinea butterflies just have the advantage to be as adults of looks that please the human mainstream, but for the ants it is not much more amusing.
Very cool beetles! I wasn't even aware of this genus - I can only imagine my shock if I happened upon a one inch-long cremastocheiline!
ReplyDeleteWhat a beauty! ... well, maybe impressive rather than beautiful. I'd love to fine one.
ReplyDeleteA very impressive beast!
ReplyDeletevia Facebook:
ReplyDeleteFrom Hillery B. Warner (NHM London)
Hi Margarethe-
... On another note, I love the information on L. florhi in your blog. If you're comfortable adding the link to that part of your blog directly to the flickr photo, I think that would be great. And informative!
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ReplyDeleteFrom Linda Draper via e mail: I just saw your blog about Lissomelas flohri . When I was an entomology student at ASU under Mont Cazier, I found a specimen at Sierra Ancha near the fire observation tower there. Dr. Cazier got excited about it, recognizing it as Lissomelas and believing it to be a new species. The basis of his thinking was because the specimen had lovely "velvet" "shoulder pads" on its elytra and it was quite shiny. Dr. Cazier went so far as to say that he would describe it and give it the name Lissomelas welchae ( Welch being my maiden name).
ReplyDeleteBecause several other of Dr. Cazier's students had recently collected "new" species, the Arizona Republic science writer did a story on the 3 of us which was picked up by Life Magazine (I think March 1969). They did a story with pictures. I left the specimen with him and to my knowledge it remains in the insect collection at ASU.
Since then, several of my contemporaries found specimens in the mountains in the southern part of the state...one I think in Madera Canyon and I seem to recall him saying that it came in to a light trap.
I'm sending this because the critters are fairly uncommon in collections and I thought you might want the chance to see the one with "velvet shoulders". It would make a nice photo.
Linda Draper
Bill Warner via e mail: Not a new species and never published. I have seen the specimen. The black tomentose markings become obscured by grease in older museum specimens, and prior to the last couple decades there were only six specimens recorded from the US. Jeff Burne changed that by finding a large series, and since then several other people have found smaller series to bring the number closer to 50 known. (I was also a student at ASU and took general entomology, with my first species description being of a Cremastocheilus!)
ReplyDelete