Adephaga
Adephaga is a suborder of the order Coleoptera (beetles), consisting of approximately 45,000 described species across 11 families and representing the second-largest suborder after Polyphaga.[1] These highly specialized insects are predominantly predatory, occupying diverse terrestrial and aquatic habitats worldwide, and are distinguished by primitive larval structures, specialized predatory legs, and a first abdominal segment divided by the hind coxae.[1][2][3] The suborder is broadly divided into two major clades: Geadephaga, which encompasses terrestrial families such as Carabidae (ground beetles, with over 40,000 species alone), Cicindelidae (tiger beetles), Rhysodidae (wrinkled bark beetles), and Trachypachidae (false ground beetles); and Hydradephaga, comprising aquatic or semi-aquatic families including Dytiscidae (predaceous diving beetles), Gyrinidae (whirligig beetles), Haliplidae (crawling water beetles), Hygrobiidae (screech beetles), Noteridae (burrowing water beetles), Amphizoidae (trout-stream beetles), and Aspidytidae (cliff water beetles).[1][2] Geadephaga is monophyletic and serves as a sister group to certain hydradephagan lineages, while Hydradephaga is paraphyletic, with Gyrinidae positioned as the basal family.[1] Adephagan beetles exhibit remarkable adaptations, such as split compound eyes in whirligig beetles for above- and below-water vision, flattened bodies and fringed legs in diving beetles for swimming, and fast-running legs in tiger beetles for pursuit predation.[3][2] Ecologically, Adephaga play vital roles as apex predators in arthropod food webs, controlling pest populations in soils and aquatic systems, and serving as bioindicators of environmental health due to their sensitivity to habitat changes.[1] Phylogenomic studies trace their origins to the Permian period, with diversification accelerating in the Mesozoic, leading to their current global distribution and species richness.[1]Taxonomy
Families and Diversity
Adephaga encompasses approximately 45,000 described species, positioning it as the second-largest suborder of Coleoptera after Polyphaga, which includes the vast majority of beetle diversity.[4] This suborder is classified into 11 families, reflecting a blend of terrestrial and aquatic forms, with the Carabidae dominating in terms of species richness. The family Carabidae, known as ground beetles, comprises around 40,000 species and represents over 90% of Adephaga's total diversity, underscoring the suborder's emphasis on terrestrial predation.[5][6] The remaining families contribute to the suborder's ecological breadth, particularly in aquatic environments. For instance, the Dytiscidae (diving beetles) include about 4,000 species that function as key predators in freshwater habitats, while the Gyrinidae (whirligig beetles) with roughly 700 species are noted for their surface-dwelling behaviors on water bodies. Smaller families like the Haliplidae (crawling water beetles, ~200 species) and Noteridae (burrowing water beetles, ~250 species) further illustrate the hydradephagan lineage's adaptations to wetland ecosystems. The least diverse families—Amphizoidae (troutstream beetles, 6 species), Aspidytidae (climbing water beetles, 4 species), Hygrobiidae (screech beetles, 6 species), Trachypachidae (false ground beetles, 2 species), Rhysodidae (wrinkled bark beetles, ~400 species), and Meruidae (water cascade beetles, 1 species)—highlight rare, specialized radiations within the suborder.[7][8][9][10][9][11][12][13][14][15] The following table summarizes the 11 families, their common names, and approximate species counts:| Family | Common Name | Approximate Species Count |
|---|---|---|
| Carabidae | Ground beetles | ~40,000 |
| Dytiscidae | Diving beetles | ~4,000 |
| Cicindelidae | Tiger beetles | ~2,600 |
| Rhysodidae | Wrinkled bark beetles | ~400 |
| Gyrinidae | Whirligig beetles | ~700 |
| Haliplidae | Crawling water beetles | ~200 |
| Noteridae | Burrowing water beetles | ~250 |
| Amphizoidae | Troutstream beetles | 6 |
| Aspidytidae | Climbing water beetles | 4 |
| Hygrobiidae | Screech beetles | 6 |
| Meruidae | Water cascade beetles | 1 |
| Trachypachidae | False ground beetles | 2 |