
- Ostomidae, Trogossitidae
- bark-gnawing beetles
- Jagdkäfer
- pehkiäiset
- skydvabaliai
- asmaļu dzimta
- platkevers, broodkevers
- gnagbiller
- flatbaggar
- zookeys.pensoft.net/article/3109/
- archive.org: ukbeetles.co.uk/biphyllidae
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trogossitidae
- delta-intkey.com/britin/col/www/peltidae.htm
- insektarium.net/coleoptera-2/trogossitidae
- gbif.org/species/4765
Most of the text below is from now defunct site www.ukbeetles.co.uk, where it was published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Around the World
A large family of around 600 described species divided among 3 subfamilies and about 50 genera although the classification is far from settled and there are many more species awaiting description. The group has a worldwide distribution and is particularly speciose in the Southern Hemisphere tropics, with nearly half the described species occurring in South America. Diversity falls away with latitude; around 60 species occur in the Nearctic, with only 22 from Canada. Around 40 species occur in Australia. They are, in general, forest insects that live under bark, in decaying wood or bracket fungi. They fall into two broad ecological groups; Peltinae, Calitinae and Lophoceratinae feed on fungi and occur under bark or within fruiting bodies of polypores etc., and the Trogossitinae which are predators occurring under bark and in galleries of bark beetles. Tenebroides mauritanicus (Linnaeus, 1758) is an exception, occurring as a pest of stored foodstuffs etc., usually inside but also, at least in Europe, occasionally in the wild. For a more detailed overview of the family click HERE.