![]() | Insects of Britain and Ireland: water beetles |
Adults. Beetles terrestrial to sub-aquatic; walking in water or free-swimming by conventional ambulatory motion of the legs, not diving strongly; moving in the water by alternate, walking leg movements; 1–1.5 mm long. Body length/maximum body width 1.3–2.55. Beetles somewhat waisted.
Eyes two; not strongly protuberant; without bristles. Mandibles with a well developed mola; with well developed prosthecae. The maxillae with distinct galea and lacinia apically to the palp. The maxillary palps conspicuously elongated, sometimes longer than the antennae. The maxillary palps conspicuously elongated, sometimes longer than the antennae. The apical segment of the maxillary palps cylindrical to fusiform. The apical segment of the labial palps not expanded apically. Antennae very short; not strongly asymmetric; 8 segmented. Antennal scape not swollen. Antennae clubbed. Antennal clubs 3 segmented (the club hairy); preceded by a cupule. Antennal insertions visible from above, or hidden from above.
Prothorax without notopleural sutures. The pronotum not narrowing towards the rear. Scutellum present. The prosternal process absent. Mid-and hind-legs not as in Gyrinidae (q.v.). The front tibia more or less club-shaped, not or scarcely emarginate near the attachment of the tarsus. The fore-leg coxal cavities medianly confluent to narrowly separated. Hind coxae not extended laterally to meet the elytra; not shaped posteriorly to receive the femur. The hind coxae not produced behind into flat plates partly concealing the hind femora. Hind coxae without the steep transverse declivity characteristic of Dryopoidea. The inner parts (processes) of the hind coxae not incorporated with the metasternum in a flat, median longitudinal keel. Tarsal segmentation formula 5, 5, 5. None of the tarsi with hidden segments. The front tarsi with as many segments as the mid-tarsi; 5-segmented. Mid-leg tarsi 5-segmented; pentamerous. Hind tarsi without swimming hairs. Hind tarsi with the apical and second segments about equal in length (and all the segments short and wide). Swimming hairs confined to the tarsi.
Elytra each with a well marked sutural stria. Wings without an anal lobe; without a medial fleck. The male external genitalia trilobate.
Adults not predacious. In moss and mud in bogs and fens.
Larvae. The larvae elongate and more or less parallel-sided; vestiture restricted to fine hairs or setae; only very lightly pigmented or sclerotized; only very lightly pigmented. The antennae 3 segmented. Frontoclypeal suture between frons and clypeus indistinct or absent. The labrum and head capsule completely fused, with no suture apparent. Apices of the mandibles with a single lobe or tooth. The maxillary palps 4 segmented. The labial palps 4 segmented. The mesothoracic legs with 1 movable claw. Tergum 9 of the abdomen entirely dorsal.
The larvae aquatic. The abdominal apex with a respiratory chamber, formed from the 8th and 9th terga and enclosing a pair of enlarged spiracles. Abdominal tergum 8 without amature. The larvae predacious.
Representation in Britain and Ireland, and worldwide. 1 species in Britain (C. seminulum). Recorded from Scotland, Northern England, South-west England and Wales, South-eastern England, and Ireland.
Classification. Suborder Polyphaga; Infraorder Staphyliniformia; Superfamily Hydrophiloidea; Hydrophilidae; Subfamily Hydrophilinae.
General comments. Maxillary palps longer than the antennae.
Miscellaneous. • Chaetarthria seminulum (from Joy, 1932).
We advise against extracting comparative information from the descriptions. This is much more easily achieved using the DELTA data files or the interactive key, which allows access to the character list, illustrations, full and partial descriptions, diagnostic descriptions, differences and similarities between taxa, lists of taxa exhibiting or lacking specified attributes, and distributions of character states within any set of taxa. See also Guidelines for using data taken from Web publications.
Cite this publication as: ‘Watson, L., and Dallwitz, M.J. 2012 onwards. Insects of Britain and Ireland: water beetles. Version: 14th April 2022. delta-intkey.com’.