Diving beetle  (Agabus brunneus)

Agabus brunneus specimen

Facts

Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Arthropoda
Class Insecta
Order Coleoptera
Family Dytiscidae
Genus Agabus
Size Length: 9-9.5 mm

Status

Classified as Vulnerable in the UK.

Description

This chocolate-brown beetle has no common English name. It is difficult to distinguish from a number of similar species, needing the close scrutiny of a feature on the underside of the beetle called the prosternal process. This is a small, spear-shaped projection just behind the head of the beetle between the first pair of legs.

Range

This beetle's range in centred on the Mediterranean, with its northern-most outposts in Belgium and southern Britain. It occurs in only two parts of the UK, west Cornwall and around the New Forest in Hampshire, although a recent survey found a specimen in Dorset.

Habitat

This species prefers shallow, swift-flowing, open lowland streams with a gravel or flint bed

Biology

It is thought that this beetle lives in the gravel beds of streams and lays its eggs in autumn. Larvae have been collected in January and March so it appears that the beetle over-winters in this stage in the UK. However, it is also believed that the beetles may breed in the spring in the warmer southern coastal sites. This species is unable to fly.

Threats

Agabus brunneus is vulnerable to a number of factors that can affect its habitat. Water abstraction, changes in drainage systems and pollution are all potential hazards. It is also susceptible to the shading of streams by ungrazed vegetation.

Conservation

This diving beetle is listed as a priority species by the UK Biodiversity Action Plan (UKBAP), and is included in English Nature's Species Recovery Programme.It is proposed that viable populations are maintained at a total of five sites by 2010, and that considerations for management of the beetle habitat should influence agri-environment schemes and drainage projects within the areas where the beetle occurs. Other water-living species will benefit from the same management regimes, one of them being the freshwater crayfish (Austropotamobius pallipes). This is a frequent occurrence when drawing up management plans for species that share a similar habitat, and it illustrates how work on one species can improve our knowledge of another that may also require conserving.

Information supplied by English Nature:

http://www.englishnature.org.uk/

Agri-environment schemes : these schemes allow the government to compensate farmers for using methods that benefit the environment. The two main initiatives in the UK are the Countryside Stewardship Scheme and Environmentally Sensitive Areas. Since October 2000 these have formed part of the England Rural Development Programme (EDRP), administered by DEFRA, the Department of Environment Food and Rural Affairs. For more on these initiatives see: http://www.defra.gov.uk/erdp/erdphome.htm
Larvae : stage in an animal's lifecycle after it hatches from the egg. Larvae are typically very different in appearance to adults; they are able to feed and move around but usually are unable to reproduce.