Common Brown Click Beetle

Athous haemorrhoidalis

"Athous haemorrhoidalis" is a species of European and Asian click beetles in the genus "Athous". Several variations are recognized.
The Athous haemorrhoidalis I think these guys are pretty cute ^_^, they can move their heads in and out (to a degree). In this picture you can see inside their thorax. I have another shot where they are tucked in. Athous haemorrhoidalis,Geotagged,Spring,United Kingdom

Appearance

The adult is a fairly slender beetle, 10–15 mm long, with straight antennae which are long enough to reach the back of the pronotum. The head and thorax are black, the elytra brown and strongly ribbed. The pronotum is clearly dimpled all over. The whole body is covered with greyish-brown hairs. The legs are a paler brown than the elytra. Like other click beetles, the joint between thorax and abdomen forms a flexible hinge, and there is a central knob at the back of the thorax. The species is sexually dimorphic; males are smaller than females, and the side of the male's pronotum is less wavy than the female's.
Click Beetle take off, Osterley Park, UK Nice spring day - and plenty of these to be seen amongst the long grass. Athous haemorrhoidalis,Click Beetle,Coleoptera,Geotagged,Spring,United Kingdom,beetle,insect

Distribution

This click beetle is found throughout the British Isles. It is widespread across Europe and Asia. It is predominantly a lowland species, being entirely absent above 600 m elevation, and becoming steadily scarcer from sea level up to 500 m.
Click Beetle (Athous haemorrhoidalis) There are an estimated 10,000 click beetles (Elateridae) worldwide in a family constantly in a state of flux and with new species being added fairly regularly.

In the UK, there are 65 known species, many of them looking very similar to  A. haemorrhoidalis. with long, thin, fairly drab, brown bodies longish antennae and biting mouthparts.

A. haemorrhoidalis is relatively  distinctive; 10-15mm in length and shiny, The head and pronotum are black and the elytra contrastingly dark brown.  The entire upper surface is clothed with pale grey-brown pubescence. The head is transverse, densely punctured and with prominent eyes and antennae containing 11 segments.

It can be found throughout most of the UK across woodland, moorland, grassland, dunes, parks and gardens etc. Active from March or April, when they can be seen basking on low vegetation.

The larvae are known to predate winter moths, plant roots and other insects; and can take two years to develop.

(Click beetles get their name from the noise they make when employing a special hinge on their thorax, arching their body to create a tension on the hinge, like a coiled spring, before suddenly releasing the tension, causing the beetle to leap into the air at a speed of more than 2 metres per second.

This is generally deployed when the beetle feels threatened or needs to escape predation. Athous haemorrhoidalis,Geotagged,Spring,United Kingdom

Habitat

If disturbed the adult can flick itself high into the air, with a takeoff speed of up to 2.27 m/s, making a loud clicking noise. It can also use this ability to right itself if it falls onto its back.

The adults live on flowers, eating pollen. In Europe they are most active in July, unlike several other click beetles which are active mainly in the spring months.

The species is found mainly in forests, both broad-leaved and coniferous. They are also found in wetland habitats such as fens and peatlands.
Fossils of the species have been found in Britain from the Holocene period immediately after the last ice age, from acid bog peat, a much wetter habitat than the beetle's usual habitats today.

Adults pollinate the frog orchid, "Coeloglossum viride". The beetles are eaten mainly by tits; they are an important prey species for the collared flycatcher, "Ficedula albicollis".

The larvae of "A. haemorrhoidalis" are damaging pests of agriculture. In an agricultural setting, the species is found in cereals, orchards, and potato crops. The larvae have a mixed diet, preying on the winter moth, "Operophtera brumata", and eating the roots of plants, mostly grasses in the family Poaceae.

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderColeoptera
FamilyElateridae
GenusAthous
SpeciesA. haemorrhoidalis