Great diving beetle  (Dytiscus marginalis)

Female great diving beetle

Facts

Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Arthropoda
Class Insecta
Order Coleoptera
Family Dytiscidae
Genus Dytiscus (1)
Size Length of larvae: up to 60 mm (3)
Length of adults: 27-35 mm (2)

Status

Common (3).

Description

The great diving beetle is, as the name suggests, a large aquatic beetle (4). It is has a beautifully streamlined body shape and is dark brown to blackish in colour with yellow legs and a yellow border around both the head and the thorax. The wing cases, or 'elytra', are ridged in females but smooth in males. Males can also be distinguished from females by the presence of suction pads on the front legs; two of which are very large. The brownish larvae have large heads, which bear impressive, large jaws (3).

Range

Found in Europe and northern Asia and is common in Britain (3).

Habitat

This water beetle is common in most aquatic habitats, in both still and running water (3), and frequently occurs in garden ponds. It is scarcer in chalk and limestone areas (1), and seems to prefer ponds with plenty of weeds (4).

Biology

Both adults and larvae of this beetle are voracious predators, taking a wide range of prey including fish. They actively search for prey, and periodically swim to the surface in order to take in air (3). Adults often fly at night, and may land on glass surfaces or roads, mistaking them for water (2). When threatened, they exude a foul-smelling fluid from the anus that deters potential predators from eating them (5).

Females lay their eggs in cavities, which they cut in the stems of water plants that protrude from the water. The eggs hatch after a number of weeks (5).

Threats

This beetle is very common and is not threatened.

Conservation

Conservation action has not been targeted at this species.

Further Information

For further information on the great diving beetle see the Animal Diversity Web fact-sheet, available on-line at:
http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/dytiscus/d._marginalis$narrative.html

Authentication

This information is awaiting authentication by a species expert, and will be updated as soon as possible. If you are able to help please contact:
arkive@wildscreen.org.uk

Elytra: in beetles and earwigs, the hard fore wings. They are held aloft when the insect flies, and are often coloured or patterned.
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.
Thorax: part of the body located near the head in animals. In insects, the three segments between the head and the abdomen, each of which has a pair of legs.

References

  1. National Biodiversity Network Species Dictionary (Jan 2003):
    http://www.nhm.ac.uk/nbn
  2. Harde, K. W. (2000) A field guide in colour to beetles. Silverdale Books, Leicester.
  3. Lyneborg, L. (1976) Beetles in colour. Blandford Press, Dorset.
  4. Joy, N. (1933) British beetles; their homes and habits. Frederick Warne & Co., Ltd., London.
  5. Animal Diversity (March 2003):
    http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/dytiscus/d._marginalis$narrative.html
  6. Buczacki, S. (2002) Fauna Britannica. Hamlyn, London.