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Green Devil Beetle

Oxysternon conspicillatum (Weber 1801)

Oxysternon conspicillatum

provided by wikipedia EN

Oxysternon conspicillatum is a species of dung beetle. It is widespread and common in both evergreen and deciduous forests of Central America and northern South America, and generally sticks to lowland, dry tropical and bamboo forests. The larvae feed on fungi, decaying organic matter, and other organic materials found in dung balls or carrion.[1][2][3]

Both male and female beetles are hard-shelled with an iridescent blue-green color on their skin. The species exhibits some sexual dimorphism; males have large black horns and spikes on their shells while females' shells are flat. Male O. conspicillatum also tend to be larger than their female counterparts.[3]

Oxysternon conspicillatum has been studied as a potential source for antimicrobial agents, with the possible use of its host defense peptides in the development of new antibiotics.[1]

A male Oxysternon conspicillatum beetle
Females lack the large horn

References

  1. ^ a b Segovia, LJT; Ramírez, GAT; Arias, DCH; et al. (Nov 2017). "Identification and characterization of novel cecropins from the Oxysternon conspicillatum neotropic dung beetle". PLOS ONE. 12 (11): e0187914. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0187914. PMC 5706684. PMID 29186139.
  2. ^ Chamorro, William; Marin-Armijos, Diego; Asenjo, Angélico; Vaz-De-Mello, Fernando Z. (2019). "Scarabaeinae dung beetles from Ecuador: a catalog, nomenclatural acts, and distribution records". ZooKeys (826): 1–343. doi:10.3897/zookeys.826.26488. PMC 6405737. PMID 30858752.
  3. ^ a b "Oxysternon conspicillatum". GBIF. Retrieved 2019-03-19.
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Oxysternon conspicillatum: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Oxysternon conspicillatum is a species of dung beetle. It is widespread and common in both evergreen and deciduous forests of Central America and northern South America, and generally sticks to lowland, dry tropical and bamboo forests. The larvae feed on fungi, decaying organic matter, and other organic materials found in dung balls or carrion.

Both male and female beetles are hard-shelled with an iridescent blue-green color on their skin. The species exhibits some sexual dimorphism; males have large black horns and spikes on their shells while females' shells are flat. Male O. conspicillatum also tend to be larger than their female counterparts.

Oxysternon conspicillatum has been studied as a potential source for antimicrobial agents, with the possible use of its host defense peptides in the development of new antibiotics.

A male Oxysternon conspicillatum beetle Females lack the large horn
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN