| Photo Information |
Copyright: Tanja Alma (sily)
(1859) |
| Genre: Animals |
| Medium: Color |
| Date Taken: 2008-04-06 |
| Categories: Insects |
| Camera: Canon PowerShot A710 IS |
| Exposure: f/4, 1/160 seconds |
| More Photo Info: [view] |
| Photo Version: Original Version |
| Date Submitted: 2008-04-14 13:50 |
| Viewed: 499 |
| Points: 6 |
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| [Note Guidelines] Photographer's Note |
On our weekend walk we stumbled upon almost 10 of these on one dirt road, I think I made 70 photos of them, unfortunately not very good ones because they kept running in the grass :)
I just copied facts from my previous post:
Meloe proscarabaeus is a European oil beetle. It lives in meadows, field margins and other warm sites in all but the far north of the continent. It lacks hind wings and the elytra are correspondingly reduced in size.
A.k.a Blister bug, is from the family Meloidae, blister beetles, contains about 2500 species, divided among 80 genera and three subfamilies.They secrete cantharidin,a poisonous chemical causing blistering of the skin and painful swelling if consumed.It is used medically to remove warts,and is collected from species of the genera Mylabris and Lytta, especially Lytta vesicatoria, better known as Spanish fly.When an adult beetle is pressed or rubbed blisters commonly occur on the neck and arms, adult beetles are attracted to outdoor lights at night.General handling of adults seldom results in blistering unless the hemolymph contacts the relatively thin skin between the fingers.Medical treatment beyond first aid for blistering probably not necessary.
The blistering agent is cantharidin odorless terpene (exo-1,2-cis-dimethyl-3,6-ep- oxyhexahydro-phthalic anhydride) occurring elsewhere only in beetles family Oedemeridae.Dried, pulverized bodies of adult beetles were once employed in human and veterinary medicine, primarily as vesicant and irritant and is still used in the U.S. as the active ingredient in a proprietary wart remover.Taken internally or absorbed through the skin, cantharidin is highly toxic to mammals.There is literature dealing with its reputed aphrodisiacal properties and numerous reports of human poisonings, both accidental and deliberate.Cantharides is sometimes specified as the Eurasian Spanishfly,however, other genera, particularly Mylabris and Epicauta, have been more commonly used, especially for extraction.It is widely assumed that cantharidin is chemical protection from predators, but there is little evidence for this.In some species, females receive large quantities of cantharidin from males during copulation.Females incorporate the material in a coating applied to the eggs.Adult beetles are phytophagous, feeding especially on plants in the families Amaranthaceae, Compositae, Leguminosae, and Solanaceae.Most adults eat only floral parts, but some eat leaves as well. A few adults are nocturnal; most are diurnal.Since adults are gregarious and often highly colored, they tend to be conspicuous. However, except for first instar larvae (triungulins) frequenting flowers or clinging to adult bees, larval blister beetles are seldom seen. So far as known, all larvae are specialized predators. Larvae of most genera enter the nests of wild bees, where they consume both immature bees and the provisions of one or more cells. Those of some Meloinae, including most Epicauta spp., prey on the eggs of acridid grasshoppers. A few larvae evidently prey on the eggs of blister beetles. |
flashpoint, lovenature, Alex99, nglen has marked this note useful Only registered TrekNature members may rate photo notes. |
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