click beetle

insect family
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Also known as: Elateridae, skipjack, snapping beetle, spring beetle
Also called:
skipjack, snapping beetle, or spring beetle

click beetle, (family Elateridae), family of approximately 7,000 species of beetles named for the clicking noise made when seized by a predator.

Taxonomy

See also list of insects.

Physical description

Most click beetles range between 2.5 and 18 mm (less than 0.75 inch) in length and are brown or black in color with either little or no ornamentation. However, some tropical species are brightly colored or luminescent. Click beetles have elongated bodies with parallel sides and bluntly rounded ends.

Sea otter (Enhydra lutris), also called great sea otter, rare, completely marine otter of the northern Pacific, usually found in kelp beds. Floats on back. Looks like sea otter laughing. saltwater otters
Britannica Quiz
Animal Group Names

When a click beetle is touched, it falls on its back and plays dead. To right itself the click beetle bends its head and thorax forward, hooking a spine into a notch on the abdomen. When the spine is released, it makes a click, and the beetle is hurled into the air.

The larvae have a hard exoskeleton and are known as wireworms because of their long, slender, cylindrical shape.

Life cycle and control

Adult click beetles usually feed on leaves at night and are most active in the summer. The larvae live in the soil from two to six years. They can be destructive plant pests, attacking seeds, plant roots, and underground stems.

The plowing of fields in the fall can cut open the pupal case and destroy the wireworms. If necessary, applications of appropriate insecticides may help control wireworm populations. Because they are attracted to sweet liquids, farmers once placed sweet baits in their fields in the spring to trap adults.

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Major genera and species

The eyed elator (Alaus oculatus), a North American click beetle, grows to 45 mm (over 1.75 inches) long and has two large black-and-white eyelike spots on the prothorax, a region behind the head.

The genus Pyrophorus, which occurs in the tropical areas of the Western Hemisphere, is bioluminescent, giving off a greenish and red-orange light. Several of these species can provide light sufficient for reading, and they have even been used as emergency light sources during surgery.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Melissa Petruzzello.