Physosterna cribripes

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Physosterna cribripes
Scientific classification
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Binomial name
Physosterna cribripes
Synonyms
  • Adesmia cribripes Haag-Rutenberg, 1875
  • Adesmia tuberculipennis Haag-Rutenberg 1875

Physosterna cribripes, the desert toktokkie or woestyntoktokkie, is a flightless species of desert-dwelling darkling beetle or Tenebrionid found along the West coast of Namibia and Angola.[1][2] This species has a body length of some 18.4 mm and a mass of 402 mg.[3]

Although the family name of Tenebrionidae implies a group preferring dark places, a large number of species from this family, such as this one, are diurnal. In the heat of summer it is active from 9-10 am and again at 4-6 pm,[4] and seeks out well-shaded microhabitats during extreme heat. It is usually found in washes, on gravel plains and in rocky places, often climbing vegetation to feed.[5]

Most darkling species are omnivores, both as adults and larvae, feeding on the detritus of fresh and decaying plant matter, dead insects, and fungi. Larvae are nocturnal, fossorial, and heavily armoured.[citation needed] Several Namibian Tenebrionids, such as Onymacris unguicularis and Onymacris bicolor, have evolved a specialised surface on their elytra, forming minute droplets from the fog which regularly occurs along the coast. Droplets condense by virtue of alternating hydrophobic, wax-coated and hydrophilic, non-waxy regions. When the beetle adopts a head-down stance facing into the fog-laden wind, condensed water drains towards its mouthparts where it is swallowed. Studies on the population density of dune beetles in the Namib Desert have shown that the fog-collecting beetles' numbers are not diminished by periods of low rainfall, whereas other Tenebrionids decline dramatically.[6] The microstructure of the elytra has been copied by cancer researchers so as to control 'spheroid sizes of therapeutic islet cells and mesenchymal stem cells'.[7]

Etymology[edit]

'Physosterna' - swollen or bladder-like sterna
'cribripes' - perforated or sieve-like foot

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Lee, M; Yang, K; Hwang, YH; Byun, Y; Lee, DY; Cho, SW; Lee, H (2015). "Spheroform: therapeutic spheroid-forming nanotextured surfaces inspired by desert beetle Physosterna cribripes". Advanced Healthcare Materials. 4 (4): 511–5. doi:10.1002/adhm.201400429. PMID 25323327. S2CID 45434867.
  2. ^ [1] [dead link]
  3. ^ http://reference.sabinet.co.za/webx/access/journal_archive/10115498/449.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ 'Desert Biology' - G.W. Brown, JR. (Academic Press, 1974)
  5. ^ "Search results | Environmental Information Service Namibia: ELibrary" (PDF). The-eis.com.
  6. ^ "The Beetles That Drink Water From Air — Biological Strategy". Asknature.org. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  7. ^ "JoVE | Peer Reviewed Scientific Video Journal - Methods and Protocols". Archived from the original on 2016-06-03. Retrieved 2022-03-24.

External links[edit]