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Hydrophiloidea

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Hydrophiloidea, known as water scavenger beetles, is a superfamily of beetles. Until recently it included only a single family, the Hydrophilidae (water scavenger beetles), but several of the subfamilies have been removed and raised to family rank.[1] Hydrophiliidae remains by far the largest member of the group, with nearly 3,000 described species. The other families have no more than 400 species.[2] The Histeroidea are closely related and sometimes considered part of a sensu lato Hydrophiloidea.[1] The majority of the clade is aquatic, which is thought to be the ancestral ecology of the group, with some lineages like Sphaeridiinae becoming secondarily terrestrial. Modern representatives of the group first appeared during the Late Jurassic.[3]

Families include:[1]

Extinct genera

References

  1. ^ a b c Short, Andrew. 2007. Hydrophiloidea. Water scavenger beetles. in The Tree of Life Web Project. Accessed 17 December 2019.
  2. ^ Fikáček, Martin; Prokin, Alexander; Yan, Evgeny; Yue, Yanli; Wang, Bo; Ren, Dong; Beattie, Robert (April 2014). "Modern hydrophilid clades present and widespread in the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous (Coleoptera: Hydrophiloidea: Hydrophilidae): Modern hydrophilid clades in the Mesozoic". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 170 (4): 710–734. doi:10.1111/zoj.12114. S2CID 82580893.
  3. ^ Fikáček, Martin; Prokin, Alexander; Angus, Robert B.; Ponomarenko, Alexander; Yue, Yanli; Ren, Dong; Prokop, Jakub (July 2012). "Phylogeny and the fossil record of the Helophoridae reveal Jurassic origin of extant hydrophiloid lineages (Coleoptera: Polyphaga)". Systematic Entomology. 37 (3): 420–447. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3113.2012.00630.x. S2CID 86311781.
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Hydrophiloidea: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Hydrophiloidea, known as water scavenger beetles, is a superfamily of beetles. Until recently it included only a single family, the Hydrophilidae (water scavenger beetles), but several of the subfamilies have been removed and raised to family rank. Hydrophiliidae remains by far the largest member of the group, with nearly 3,000 described species. The other families have no more than 400 species. The Histeroidea are closely related and sometimes considered part of a sensu lato Hydrophiloidea. The majority of the clade is aquatic, which is thought to be the ancestral ecology of the group, with some lineages like Sphaeridiinae becoming secondarily terrestrial. Modern representatives of the group first appeared during the Late Jurassic.

Families include:

Epimetopidae Georissidae Helophoridae Hydrochidae Hydrophilidae Spercheidae
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