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Eastern Eyed Click Beetle

Alaus oculatus

Habitat:

Forest in rural Georgia, USA

Notes:

The eyed elator, Alaus oculatus, is a very large click beetle. It is also called the eyed click beetle. Click beetles are so called because of their unusual mechanism for righting themselves when upset. The beetles snap their bodies with an audible click that sends them sailing up into the air more or less like a tiddly wink. The name “elator” is derived from the family Elateridae, the family of click beetles. The “eyed” part of the name refers to large eye spots on the thorax. These large, fake eyes probably scare birds and other predators. These beetles can fly and are sometimes attracted to lights at night. Females lay their eggs in decaying logs and stumps. Immature eyed elators are wireworms that grow to almost two inches long. They have small but functional legs and are slender like earthworms but are smooth, tough, and brown. These wireworms burrow through the rotting wood and feed on grubs and other hapless organisms.

1 Species ID Suggestions

Brian38
Brian38 4 years ago
Eastern eyed click beetle
Alaus oculatus Alaus oculatus - Wikipedia


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2 Comments

Scott Frazier
Scott Frazier 4 years ago

Your insect spotting has been moved from "other" to arthropods. :-)

ForestDragon
ForestDragon 4 years ago

This beauty is actually a large click beetle. They are really neat!

jjtanksley
Spotted by
jjtanksley

Georgia, USA

Spotted on Jan 13, 2018
Submitted on Jan 13, 2020

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