Carabus insulicola
Carabus insulicola is a species of black-colored beetle from the family Carabidae native to Japan. They are also known as ground beetles, and are oval shaped and elongated. They are black with a green metallic hue and vertical stripes running down their backs. The length of a fully grown beetle ranges from 27 to 31 mm. They have three pairs of legs and two pairs of wings. The outer wings are greatly degenerated, making them unable to fly. However, their relatively long legs allow them to walk and run fast. They have prominent mandibles that allow them to capture and eat prey.
This ground beetle species is most active during the summer, which is when their mating season occurs. Both females and males can mate with multiple partners during one mating season. This creates a unique situation for sperm competition to occur. Two methods that male C. insulicola use to increase their reproductive success are post-copulatory guarding and spermatophore displacement. Post-copulatory guarding is when a male remains on the female’s back after copulation, which increases the likelihood of the first mate fertilizing the eggs. Spermatophore displacement is when the second mate replaces the first mate’s spermatophore from the optimal position in the vagina with his own spermatophore, which increases his own chances of fertilizing the eggs. The male genitalia have evolved to make spermatophore displacement more efficient, but in response, female genitalia have coevolved to minimize female fitness costs.
Geographic distribution and habitat
These beetles are endemic to Japan. They are distributed across central and northeastern Honshu. They tend to dwell in lowland habitats like grasslands, open forests, riverbanks, and forest edges. They can be found under leaves, in the soil, or running on the ground. Larvae can be found under objects and debris on the ground, while pupae grow in cells made of soil buried a few inches underground.Food resources
C. insulicola are predatory beetles. They hunt smaller invertebrates for their primary food source, including snails, earthworms, and caterpillars. While adults feed on all of these invertebrates, larvae only eat earthworms. In laboratory experiments using C. insulicola, they can be fed minced beef and chopped apples to mimic their natural diet.Social behaviors
Ground beetles are nocturnal organisms, so they are most active at night. However, they can also be seen during the day. They are solitary beetles, as they only come together to mate and reproduce. There are no families or herds with C. insulicola. After a male and a female mate, they part ways, and males are not expected to help raise the offspring. It is also common for females to mate multiply, meaning they copulate with different males during the mating season. Multiple mating is often observed in species where the only investment a male makes towards the offspring is his sperm. This allows for sperm competition to occur, where the female can then ensure that her eggs will be fertilized and increase the genetic quality of her brood.Life cycle
There are four stages in the ground beetle’s lifespan. These stages are the egg stage, the larval stage, the pupal stage, and the adult stage. Eggs are laid in moist soil and take about eleven days to hatch. These eggs have an elliptical shape and grow to be around 6.6 mm in length. A ground beetle’s clutch size can vary from 30 to 600 eggs. After the eggs hatch, the larvae feed and grow for about a year until they mature. They will mature during the summer and then pupate in chambers made of soil. Because the pupal stage occurs in the soil, pupae are rarely observed. Adults emerge from the pupal stage in late summer to autumn, followed by hibernation throughout the winter without mating. These overwintered virgins then emerge in the spring, where they are ready to mate and reproduce. C. insulicola are univoltine, meaning there is one generation, or one brood of offspring laid, per year. Ground beetles can live for up to 2-3 years.Genital morphology
Male genitalia consist of an endophallus, aedeagus, and a copulatory piece. The copulatory piece is highly sclerotized and hook-like. It is attached to the dorsal wall of the endophallus. The spermatophore, a hemispherical capsule that contains sperm, is deposited through an opening at the end of the endophallus called the gonopore. Female genitalia are made up of a bursa copulatrix, dorsal lobe, spermatheca, oviduct, vaginal apophysis, and a vaginal appendix. This vaginal appendix is a pocket that is attached to the bursa copulatrix. During copulation, the copulatory piece and the vaginal appendix are the structures that are actually coupled. The bursa copulatrix is responsible for storing and digesting the spermatophore. The spermatheca is a skinny tube-like structure responsible for storing the sperm that is taken from the spermatophore as it is digested in the bursa copulatrix and fertilizing the eggs. Sperm can only be transferred to the spermatheca if the spermatophore is located at the innermost corner of the bursa copulatrix and attached to the vaginal apophysis.C. insulicola are an example of a species that has evolved to have sexually antagonistic genitalia. Research has found that males have evolved to have longer copulatory pieces in order to increase their reproductive success. A longer copulatory piece could be used to displace previously deposited spermatophores from rival males, but females pay a fitness cost if they mate with a male with a long copulatory piece by laying unfertilized eggs, or egg dumping. In response, females have evolved to have longer vaginal appendixes. A longer vaginal appendix lessened this fitness cost by decreasing egg dumping and increasing fertilization. Therefore, while a longer copulatory piece benefits male fitness at the cost of female fitness, longer vaginal appendixes benefit female fitness at the cost of male reproductive success. This evolutionary tug of war results in coevolutionary divergence of male and female genitalia in C. insulicola. However, in the end, the more the lengths of the copulatory piece and vaginal appendix match, the more successful insemination will be.