False Bombardier Beetle
Crawling amongst the test tubes in the lab where I work was
a beautifully colored beetle. A
co-worker came across it and asked me if I knew what type it was. I knew that it was related to the
blister beetles, so I did a little digging and found that it is a False
Bombardier Beetle (Galerita bicolor),
from the Carabidae family of
predatory ground beetles. Through the
employment of mimicry, this beetle appears to be a real bombardier beetle to its predators, which in turn aids it to evade them. The easiest way to tell the difference is that the false
ones, like this one, have a black head, whereas the real bombardier’s head is
orange. True bombardier beetles secrete in a cloud, with an audible
popping sound, a mixture of chemicals- hydroquinone and hydrogen peroxide, whereas these beetles have a pair of abdominal defensive glands
which contains formic acid (same defense chemical utilized by ants) along with
other chemical irritants, which can be sprayed towards a predator or a person who
is handling it.
Labels: beetles, bombardier beetle
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