Biology:Flour beetle

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Short description: Common name for beetles that eat flour
Flour beetles
Tribolium castaneum
Tribolium castaneum
Scientific classificationEdit this classification
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Animalia
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Arthropoda
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Insecta
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Coleoptera
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Cucujiformia
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Tenebrionoidea
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Tenebrionidae
Genera

Aphanotus
Gnatocerus
Latheticus
Palorus
Tenebrio
Tribolium

Flour beetles are members of several darkling beetle genera including Tribolium and Tenebrio. They are pests of cereal silos and are widely used as laboratory animals, as they are easy to keep. The flour beetles consume wheat and other grains, are adapted to survive in very dry environments, and can withstand even higher amounts of radiation than cockroaches.[1] They are a major pest in the agricultural industry and are highly resistant to insecticides.[dubious ]

The larvae of T. molitor, when full-grown, are known as mealworms; small specimens and the larvae of the other species are called mini mealworms.

Flour beetles are part of the life cycle of the tapeworm Hymenolepis nana, which causes hymenolepiasis in humans. Female reproduction is distributed over their adult life-span which lasts about a year. Flour beetles also display pre-mating discrimination among potential mates. Female flour beetles, specifically of T. castaneum, can mate with different males and may choose more attractive males over the course of their adult life-span.[2]

Selected species

Research

In 2008, the Tribolium castaneum genome was sequenced by the Tribolium Genome Sequencing Consortium.[3]

See also

  • Grain beetle (disambiguation)

References

  1. Tuncbilek, A.S.; Ayvaz, A.; Öztürk, F.; Kaplan, B. (2003). "Gamma radiation sensitivity of larvae and adults of the red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum Herbst.". Journal of Pest Science 76 (5): 129–132. doi:10.1007/s10340-003-0002-9. 
  2. Fedina, Tatyana Y.; Lewis, Sara M. (21 April 2018). "An integrative view of sexual selection in Tribolium flour beetles". Biological Reviews 83 (2): 151–171. doi:10.1111/j.1469-185X.2008.00037.x. PMID 18429767. 
  3. Schröder, R. (2008). "The genome of the model beetle and pest Tribolium castaneum". Nature 452 (7190): 949–955. doi:10.1038/nature06784. PMID 18362917. Bibcode2008Natur.452..949R. 

Wikidata ☰ Q102347715 entry