Trox scaber

Trox scaber

''Trox scaber'' is a beetle of the Family Trogidae. The 5 to 8 mm long insect is found worldwide, including in Europe, and lives in bird nests.
Trox scaber *Tentative ID. This beetle was dead, so I brought it home with me and will confirm the ID by microscopy.

Habitat: Adirondack Mountains -- I'm not sure what the exact location was because we were mountain hiking.

*The Adirondack mountains are located in northeastern New York and contains more than 6 million acres of forests, including mountains, wetlands, and old-growth forests. Geotagged,Summer,Trogidae,Trox,Trox scaber,United States,beetle

Appearance

The beetle is brown to black-brown. The antennae are rust red. The bristles are brownish-yellow and not black. The body is short, obovate and dome-shaped.

The head is recessed into the pronotum. The antennae have 10 segments. The last 3 segments form a fan and, because of the fine hairs, are not shiny. The first flagellomere is long and slightly undermined underneath. The mouthparts point downwards and are not level with the clypeus. The mandible is short, with small, nearly smooth masticatory processes. The maxillary palpi are rather short, and the terminal segment is elongated. The third segment of the labial palpus is rounded.

The lateral and basal margins of the pronotum are bordered. The sides are edged with short bristles. At the base are less regular, somewhat longer bristles. The curved disc is coarsely sculpted and also has rows of bristles.

The elytra cover the telson. Each elytron bears 10 thin, even and shallowly punctured stripes. Between these are alternatingly about four times as wide, higher arched and about three times as wide, less curved spaces. On each of the higher, wider surfaces is a row of small humps, which are occupied with short, strong bristles. On the narrower sections, there are no humps and the bristles are much sparser and found as a row of very small tufts of bristles. The sides of the elytra are bordered with a row of short bristles.

Between the forelegs, the pronotum is posteriorly extended. This prosternal process is short and pointy. Only 5 sternites can be found on the abdomen. The coxae of the middle legs are very small and round. The legs have five-segmented tarsi. The outer edges of the tibiae of the front legs are serrated, which hints that they are fossorial legs.

Naming

''Trox scaber'' was previously put in the Scarabaeidae because of the similarity of its antennae to that of members of this family.
The genus ''Trox'' has 46 species throughout the world. In Europe, there are 21 species, all belonging to the subgenus ''Trox''. There are about 8 in Central Europe.
The name ''Trox'' may have been given because the mandible is forked. It is described by Fabricius as ''Maxilla bifida''. The species name ''scaber'' alludes to the rough surface of the elytra.

Distribution

The species is found almost worldwide. In Central Europe, they are common in low-elevation terrain and are rare to the Alps.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderColeoptera
FamilyTrogidae
GenusTrox
SpeciesT. scaber