Varied Carpet Beetle

Varied carpet beetles are about 3 millimetres long and are usually found indoors feeding off carpets, furniture and fabrics.

Species introduction

At a glance
Latin name: 
Anthrenus verbasci
Family: 
Larder beetles
Family Latin name: 
DERMESTIDAE
Category: 
Insects other

Species description

Species description

Varied carpet beetles are about 3 millimetres long and are usually found indoors feeding off carpets, furniture and fabrics. They feed on pollen outdoors when looking for a mate - as the photographs shown here clearly show. 

As their name suggests, they have a varied appearance. The photographs here show a brown variant and a black and white one.

Species photographs

Larger photograph(s) (click to magnify)

Details

Species family information

Larder beetles - or skin beetles, carpet beetles, hide beetles and leather beetles - are a family of small beetles numbered nearly 2,000 individual species. They are predominantly scavengers. 

Most beetles in this family are small - under a centimetre in length - possessing hairy or scaly wing casings, often with interesting patterns and colouring. 

These small beetles are ubiquitous, and their presence in crime scenes is often helpful in the forensic determination of a time of death.

Category information

Insects evolved in the Ordovician from a crustacean ancestral lineage as terrestrial invertebrates with six legs (the Hexapoda). This was the time when terrestrial plants first appeared. In the Devonian some insects developed wings and flight, the first animals to do so. An early flying group was the Odonata from the Carboniferous, the damselflies and dragonflies, which have densely-veined wings and long, ten-segmented bodies. They are day-flying carnivores, with an aquatic larval stage, so are commonly seen flying near water. The carnivorous larvae are called nymphs. Odonata species are short-lived, damselflies surviving for 2-4 weeks, dragonflies for up to 2 months.

Some insect groups in the Cretaceous co-evolved with the flowering plants, and they have had a close association ever since. These groups are the Hymenoptera (bees, wasps, and ants), the Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths), the Diptera (flies), and the Coleoptera (beetles). The diversity of beetles is astonishing. Of all the known animal species on the planet, one in five is a beetle!