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NOTE: As of 2014, the California Beetle Project page is no longer updated. The original database and list of California beetles in the menu on the left will remain for the time being, but the information contained within is not necessarily current. SBMNH Entomology Curator Matthew L. Gimmel has divided up the function of the original database into two conceptual halves:

  1. The SBMNH Entomology specimen-level database, including all SBMNH beetle specimens included in the CBP database, which is now available (and ever-growing) through the ecdysis portal at https://serv.biokic.asu.edu/ecdysis/

  2. A literature- (and available specimen-)based checklist.
  3. of the Coleoptera of California, which is being revised and re-compiled by Dr. Gimmel, and, as of January 2017, is about 85% complete.




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Last updated 01/16/2009

 California Beetle Project > Species Pages > Heterlimnius corpulentus

Classification

Scientific name: Heterlimnius corpulentus (LeConte)
    Order Coleoptera
    Superfamily Byrrhoidea
    Family Elmidae

Images (click to enlarge)

What it looks like: 2-2.5 mm in length. Its body has wide, alternating bands of orange and dark brown with orange-brown legs. The elytra fully cover the abdomen and have striae, or shallow punctures, running the length of the wing coverings. There is only one other species of Heterlimnius in our area. H. corpulentus has ten antennal segments, while H. keobelei has eleven segments. However, beetles have been found with one ten-segmented antenna and one eleven-segmented antenna, calling into question just how distinct the two species really are from one another.

Where you'll find it: These beetles can be found in rapid streams at high elevations from British Columbia down into the northern Sierra Nevada.

Natural History: Very little is known about the habits of H. corpulentus. However, it appears they are rarely found in streams below 6,000 feet.

This page was written by Maren Farnum, a 2005 California Beetle Project intern.




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