Identification, Images, & Information
For Insects, Spiders & Their Kin
For the United States & Canada
Clickable Guide
Moths Butterflies Flies Caterpillars Flies Dragonflies Flies Mantids Cockroaches Bees and Wasps Walkingsticks Earwigs Ants Termites Hoppers and Kin Hoppers and Kin Beetles True Bugs Fleas Grasshoppers and Kin Ticks Spiders Scorpions Centipedes Millipedes

Calendar

TaxonomyBrowseInfoImagesLinksBooksData
Photo#87746
could it be? - Family Ochodaeidae - Sand-loving Scarab Beetles [30] - Odonteus - female

could it be? - Family Ochodaeidae - Sand-loving Scarab Beetles [30] - Odonteus - Female
Medford, (~15 miles east of Philadelphia, PA) Burlington County, New Jersey, USA
June 21, 1989
Size: ~6mm
I've previously had trouble IDing this guy (yes, the date is correct - I had to put parts of life on hold for awhile) and didn't have any of Arnett's books until 2 years ago. But even with Downie & Arnett I couldn't seem to even get to a subfamily (Scarbs were still one big happy family). This beetle is even part of the reason I stumbled upon BugGuide about 9 months ago, looking for some ID help from the Web. So now that the collecting season is mostly over I went back to shoot and post this beetle, and I thought I'd try the keys quickly again one more time. This time for some reason I counted the antenna segments a little more exactly and come up with 10. I previously assumed I missed one in the base of the club. But following 10 segments, the key leads to Ochodaeinae (now Ochodaeidae), and the single species listed from the northeast - Ochodaeus musculus. I couldn't find any web photos, but as best I can tell, the description in Downie & Arnett seems to match.

comformations or corrections welcome!

Images of this individual: tag all
could it be? - Family Ochodaeidae - Sand-loving Scarab Beetles [30] - Odonteus - female could it be? - Family Ochodaeidae - Sand-loving Scarab Beetles [30] - Odonteus - female could it be? - Family Ochodaeidae - Sand-loving Scarab Beetles [30] - Odonteus - female

Moved
Moved from Ochodaeus musculus.

unfortunately not
this is actually a female Odonteus sp., a Geotrupidae
Ochodaeus can be differentiated by;

Sample image, not musculus, but similar. I can't tell from your photo, but antennae must have 11 segments. Additionally, no Ochodaeus sp. I'm familiar with will have the pronotum like this, with the punctate medial impression. Finally the canthus dividing the eye is telling.

 
Thanks for the correction!
I'm not sure either where that 11th segment is hidding, but I'll anotate my Downie and Arnett key with the mesotibia serrate info. That's a lot easier to see.

Thanks also for all the detailed info on the Odonteus genus page.

New family or not, BugGuide has been a wonderful discovery for me :)

 
A picture
really is worth a thousand words. Nice addition to the guide, for this genus, didn't have any females, or from your locale.

:-(
Not a new family afterall.

Moved
Moved from Beetles.

Comment viewing options
Select your preferred way to display the comments and click 'Save settings' to activate your changes.