urbpan: (monarch)
urbpan ([personal profile] urbpan) wrote2006-11-19 09:42 pm

365 Urban species. #323: Devil's Coach Horse



Photo by [livejournal.com profile] cottonmanifesto. Location: Olmsted Park.

Urban species #323: Devil's coach horse Staphylinus olens

First, I must confess to another tentative and perhaps dubious identification. In my defense, there are more named species of insects than any other life form, more species of beetles than any other insect, and in North America, more species of rove beetles than any other beetle family. That being said, this creature looks very much to me like a devil's coach horse, a European rove beetle widely introduced to gardens and yards around the world.

You might think that underneath a log is nice safe place for detritus-feeding animals, peacefully grazing on rot-softened organic matter. But the maggots, earthworms, and woodlice are preyed upon by the devil's coach horse. With powerful mandibles that can deliver a painful bite to a human finger, they chop up their invertebrate prey into chunks. The devil's coach horse is among the largest of the rove beetles, and even feed on other predatory animals, such as the woodlouse spider.

Rove beetles are distinguished by their very short wings, which make them look rather un-beetlelike. Rove beetles' incomplete wing covers (called "elytra") don't cover their abdomens, causing them to be sometimes confused with earwigs. Devil's coach horse beetles bend their abdomens when disturbed, much as earwigs do, but they also emit a foul-smelling fluid. This behavior has earned them the alternate common name "cocktail." I think "devil's coach horse" sounds cooler.

[identity profile] spocks-girl.livejournal.com 2006-11-20 02:47 am (UTC)(link)
In all my childhood years of rooting around in the muck, I've never seen one of these creatures before. Thanks for the profile.

>>I think "devil's coach horse" sounds cooler<<

Absolutely!

[identity profile] drocera.livejournal.com 2006-11-20 03:08 am (UTC)(link)
Ha! My dyslexic mind read that as "Devil's cockroach." Just as good as coach horse, in my opinion!

[identity profile] wirrrn.livejournal.com 2006-11-20 05:56 am (UTC)(link)

Hey,

That's definitely a Devil's Coach Horse. Like all of the Staphylinids, they're a primary predator of maggots, which means they're found in large numbers on human corpses at the scenes of homicides. I'm prolly going to be up to my elbows in them when I start my Forensic Entomology course in February!

The most common Devil's Coach Horse over here is this one, The Orange-Headed Rove Beetle:
http://agspsrv34.agric.wa.gov.au/ento/_fpclass/forensic7.jpg

-I've raised several generations of the little dudes in a terrarium with MacNuggets as a food base/maggot attractant!

Identification

[identity profile] rockbalancer.livejournal.com 2006-11-20 04:52 pm (UTC)(link)
So what field guide did you use for this identification. I really would like to see it. I have had a hard time finding an Eastern Mass insect field guide.

Devil's Coach Horse

(Anonymous) 2010-09-08 04:46 am (UTC)(link)
We just found one in Sequim. Never seen one before!

(Anonymous) 2010-09-11 06:09 am (UTC)(link)
i just found one of these in my resturant here in mount vernon wa. does anyone know if they nest or reproduce quickly?