Fig. 121—Adimerus setosus. Adimeridae. A, the Insect; B, one foot more enlarged. Mexico. From Biol. Centr. Amer. Col. ii. pt. i.
Fig. 122—Tiresias serra. Larva. New Forest.
Fam. 43. Dermestidae.—Tarsi five-jointed; antennae usually short, with the club frequently very large in proportion, and with the under side of the thorax bearing a hollow for its reception. Front coxae rather long, oblique: hind coxa formed to receive the femur when in repose. A family of 300 or 400 species of small or moderate-sized beetles; the surface, usually covered with fine hair, forming a pattern, or with scales. Byturus, the position of which has long been disputed, has now been placed in this family; it has a more imperfectly formed prosternum, and the third and fourth joints of the tarsi are prolonged as membranous lobes beneath; the hind coxae leave the femora quite free. Dermestidae in the larval state nearly all live on dried animal matter, and are sometimes very destructive; some of them totally destroy zoological collections. They are very remarkable on account of the complex clothing of hairs they bear; they have good powers of locomotion, and many of them have a peculiar gait, running for a short distance, then stopping and vibrating some of their hairs with extreme rapidity. They exhibit great variety of form. Many of them are capable of supporting life for long periods on little or no food, and in such cases moult an increased number of times: pupation takes place in the larval skin. Anthrenus fasciatus has been reared in large numbers on a diet of dried horse-hair in furniture. The young larva of this species observed by the writer did not possess the remarkable, complex arrangement of hairs that appeared when it was further grown. The most curious of Dermestid larvae is that of Tiresias serra, which lives amongst cobwebs in old wood, and probably feeds on the remains of Insects therein, perhaps not disdaining the cobwebs themselves. Attention has been frequently called to the hairs of the larvae of these Insects, but they have never been adequately discussed, and their function is quite unknown.
Fam. 44. Byrrhidae (Pill-beetles).—Oval or round, convex beetles; tarsi five-jointed, front coxae not exserted, transverse; hind coxa shielding the retracted femur. The whole of the appendages capable of a complete apposition to the body. Although a small family of only 200 or 300 species, Byrrhidae are so heterogeneous that no characteristic definition that will apply to all the sub-families can be framed. Very little is known as to their life-histories. Byrrhus pilula is one of our commonest beetles, and may be found crawling on paths in early spring even in towns; it moves very slowly, and when disturbed, at once contracts the limbs so completely that it looks like an inanimate object. The larva is cylindrical, soft; the prothoracic and last two abdominal segments are larger than the others, the last bearing two pseudopods; its habits are unknown, and no good figure exists of it.
The chief groups of Byrrhidae are Nosodendrides, Byrrhides (including Amphicyrtides), Limnichides, and Chelonariides. The first consists of species frequenting the exuding sap of trees; they have an unusually large mentum, abruptly clubbed antennae, and the head cannot be retracted and concealed. The genus Nosodendron seems to be distributed over a large part of the world. The Byrrhides have the antennae gradually thicker towards the tip, the mentum small, and the head and thorax so formed that the former can be perfectly retracted. The species are rather numerous, and are found in the northern and antipodeal regions, being nearly completely absent from the tropics. The Limnichides are minute Insects living in very moist places; they have small delicate antennae, which are imperfectly clubbed. The group is very widely distributed.
The Chelonariides are a very peculiar form of Coleoptera: oval Insects of small size with the prothorax so formed that the head can be withdrawn under (rather than into) it, and then abruptly inflexed, so that the face then forms part of the under surface: the antennae have the basal three joints thicker than the others; these being not in the least clubbed, but having the joints so delicately connected that the organs are rarely unmutilated. The modifications of the head and prothorax are quite unlike those of other Byrrhidae, and if the Chelonariides do not form a distinct family, they should be associated with Dascillidae. Nothing is known as to the earlier stages. They are chiefly tropical Insects, though one species is found in North America.
Fam. 45. Cyathoceridae.—Minute Insects of broad form; parts of the mouth concealed; antennae four-jointed; tarsi not divided into joints; prosternum small. The only species of this aberrant family, Cyathocerus horni, has been found in Central America. Nothing is known as to its life-history.
Fam. 46. Georyssidae.—Antennae short, clubbed; tarsi four-jointed; prosternum very small; front coxae exserted, but not contiguous. There are about two dozen species of these small beetles known. Our British Georyssus pygmaeus lives in extremely wet places, and covers itself with a coating of mud or fine sand so that it can only be detected when in movement. Nothing further is known as to its life-history or habits. Members of the genus have been detected in widely-separated parts of the globe.