Heterochelus detritus

Heterochelus detritus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Suborder: Polyphaga
Infraorder: Scarabaeiformia
Family: Scarabaeidae
Genus: Heterochelus
Species:
H. detritus
Binomial name
Heterochelus detritus

Heterochelus detritus is a species of beetle of the family Scarabaeidae.[1] It is found in South Africa (Northern Cape, Western Cape).[2][3]

Description

Adults reach a length of about 8.5–10 mm (0.33–0.39 in). Males are black, with the elytra sienna-brown and the hind legs reddish and the anterior and intermediate legs piceous. The head and pronotum are finely and very densely scabrose and clothed with a short but erect pubescence, which is flavescent on the head, black on the disk, but turning to greyish above that part of the base which adjoins the scutellum. The scutellum is clothed with dense greyish hairs and the elytra are indistinctly multi-striate, and have, in addition to a single row along the suture, three duplicate series of very short, dark brown setae. The propygidium and pygidium are glabrous and piceous brown. The head, pronotum, scutellum and pectus of the females are covered with a sub-flavescent pubescence which is denser and longer than in males, and the elytra and abdomen are very light testaceous.[3]

References

  1. ^ BioLib
  2. ^ Schoolmeesters, P. (2025). "Heterochelus detritus at Catalogue of Life". World Scarabaeidae Database (version 2025-10-07). In O. Bánki, Y. Roskov, M. Döring, G. Ower, D. R. Hernández Robles, C. A. Plata Corredor, T. Stjernegaard Jeppesen, A. Örn, T. Pape, D. Hobern, S. Garnett, H. Little, R. E. DeWalt, J. Miller, T. Orrell, & R. Aalbu, Catalogue of Life (2026-01-16). Amsterdam, Netherlands: Catalogue of Life Foundation. Retrieved March 11, 2026.
  3. ^ a b Péringuey, L. (1902). "Descriptive catalogue of the Coleoptera of South Africa (Lucanidae and Scarabaeidae), Sub-families: Rutelinae, Hopliinae". Transactions of the South African Philosophical Society. 12: 561–920. Retrieved March 11, 2026. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.