-
black with red
markings on the
elytra (forewings).
Burying beetles are true to
their name—they
bury the carc****es of
small vertebrates such as
birds and...
- americ****, also
known as the
American burying beetle or
giant carrion beetle, is a
critically endangered species of
beetle endemic to
North America. It belongs...
- (gold-necked
carrion beetle or
tomentose burying beetle) is a
species of
burying beetle that was
described by
Friedrich Weber in 1801. The
beetle belongs to the...
- larvae.
Burying beetles are
attentive parents, and parti****te in
cooperative care and
feeding of
their offspring. Both
parents work to
bury small animal...
-
Nicrophorus vespilloides is a
burying beetle described by
Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Herbst in 1783. The
beetles vary
widely in size and can
present with...
-
carrion are
ephemeral habitats that are
frequently visited by
beetles (dung
beetles,
burying beetles). P****tic
nematodes (Rhabditoides) and
mites (e.g. genera...
- pustulatus, also
known as the
pustulated carrion beetle or
blistered burying beetle, is a
species of
burying beetle that was
described by
Johann Karl Wilhelm...
-
Silphidae is a
family of
beetles that are
known commonly as
large carrion beetles,
carrion beetles or
burying beetles.
There are two subfamilies: Silphinae...
-
encroaching female.
Infanticide has also been
recorded in
another insect, the
burying beetle Nicrophorus orbicollis.
Wikimedia Commons has
media related to Lethocerus...
- Bird". The New Yorker. 90 (15): 30. 2017 The
Burying Beetle Limón, Ada (February 27, 2017). "The
Burying Beetle". The New Yorker. 93 (2): 39. Overp**** Limón...