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| Profile |
| Scientific
name: |
Allomyrina dichotoma |
| English
name: |
Rhinoceros beetle,
Unicorn beetle |
| Common
name: |
Dou worm |
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| Features: |
Male
Rhinoceros beetles are quite majestic looking, with large,
lustrous, almost leathery bodies made of bitumen. They have
a pair of horns on their head that look like rhinoceros horns
and another sharp horn on the front of their thorax. Only
males have horns; females are quite plain looking. Adults
develop into various sizes, depending on the quality and quantity
of food that they eat while they are still in the larvae stage. |
| Behavior: |
Adults
emerge between May and August and usually prefer to sip the
sap from tree trunks in small groups. However, a few species
like to feed on rotten fruits and sap, gnaw on tree trunks,
or chew on the bases of leafstalks, and thus they are regarded
as garden pests. A photokinetic insect, Rhinoceros beetles
usually appear in lit areas at night. Grubs live in soil or
rotten wood that is rich in organic matter, feeding off of
humus, and will remain there until they turn into pupae. |
| Habitat: |
Rhinoceros
beetles inhabit broad-leaved forests in tropical and subtropical
mountainous areas at low and middle elevations. They can also
be found on plains and in mountainous regions of Taiwan. |
| Low-Altitude
Areas>Fauna>Rhinoceros
beetle |
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