Japanese rhinoceros beetle

Allomyrina dichotoma, also known as Japanese rhinoceros beetle, Japanese horned beetle, or kabutomushi (カブトムシ, lit.'Kabuto insect'), is a species of rhinoceros beetle.

Japanese rhinoceros beetle
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Scarabaeidae
Genus: Allomyrina
Species:
A. dichotoma
Binomial name
Allomyrina dichotoma
(Linnaeus, 1771) [1]
Synonyms
  • Trypoxylus dichotomus
  • Allomyrina dichotomus

Etymology

In Japanese, rhinoceros beetles are called kabutomushi (かぶとむし, also written 甲虫 or かぶと虫). Mushi is Japanese for insect, and kabuto is Japanese for helmet, literally referring to the samurai helmet.[2] The beetle's Korean name 'Jangsupungdeng-i (장수풍뎅이, "General beetle") sounds very different but is similar in nature. In Chinese the beetle is called '獨角仙' (which translates to 'single-horned immortal') or '雙叉犀金龜'.

List of subspecies

  • Allomyrina dichotoma dichotoma: Mainland China, Korean Peninsula
  • Allomyrina dichotoma inchachina: Kume Island
  • Allomyrina dichotoma septentrionalis: Tsushima Island, Honshu, Shikoku, Kyushu
  • Allomyrina dichotoma takarai Okinawa
  • Allomyrina dichotoma tunobosonis: Taiwan
  • Allomyrina dichotoma politus: Indochina
  • Allomyrina dichotoma tsuchiyai: Kuchinoerabu Island
  • Allomyrina dichotoma shizuae: Yakushima Island, Tanegashima Island


[3] [4]

Description

Allomyrina dichotoma, male and female. Mounted specimen
Allomyrina dichotoma male from Taiwan

Allomyrina dichotoma shows a striking sexual dimorphism. The males are much larger, reaching a length of 40–80 mm, while females can reach a length of about 40–60 mm. The long cephalic horn of this species has a characteristic shape in the form of the letter Y and it is used by males during the mating period and to maintain territories.[2] By means of their forked horn they lift other males off the ground and throw them into the air.[2] In addition to their impressive and ornate protuberance they also have a smaller thoracic horn, also forked. Their eyes may be white or red and are adapted to low light levels, as this species is nocturnal.[2] The body is dark brown, while the ventral part of the body is black and brilliant and the front legs are unusually long. Like all Dynastinae species, these beetles are strong flyers,[2] although they never cover long distances during the flight.

Distribution and habitat

This species is present in Japan (Honshu, Kyūshū and other islands including Okinawa), Taiwan, Korean Peninsula and eastern China.[5] It can be found in broad-leaved forests in tropical and subtropical mountainous habitats. Across populations and regions, male beetles can vary greatly in size and horn performance, and it is suggested that differences are due to relative intensities of selection. [6]

Life cycle and behavior

Third instar larva (last step before metamorphosis)

The Japanese rhinoceros beetle will live most of its life underground in larval and pupal stages,[2] spending only about four months as an actual beetle before death. The earliest beetles will emerge from the ground in late spring; they will usually die around mid-September to early October. Their preferred foods are tree saps, fruits and anything sugary.[2]

Male beetles normally die in the fall after mating many times, while female beetles normally die shortly after laying eggs as reproduction shortens their lifespan.[7] Fighting occurs among males competing for mates and territory. The eggs are laid directly in the ground, which will hatch into larvae that usually mature in a year.[2]

In the larval stage, it can decompose recalcitrant wood material and humus efficiently through secreting various digestive enzymes comprising cellulase, glycanase, and glycosidases to degrade lignocellulose-rich plant polymers.[8] This has been harnessed industrially to biotransform the waste substrate from mushroom production.[9] To study this process, a 636.27 Mb/10 chromosome reference genome was produced, and transcriptome analysis carried out on larvae feeding on sawdust or mushroom residue. Revealing that the expression of digestive enzyme genes was significantly higher in the midgut.[10]

In Japanese culture

Japanese rhinoceros beetle

Japanese rhinoceros beetles are very popular in anime, tokusatsu, advertisements, televisions, and films in Japan. Characters based on Kabutomushi include the title characters from Kamen Rider Stronger and Kamen Rider Kabuto, kaiju Megalon from the Godzilla franchise, and Heracross from the Pokémon series of video games.

Many children in Japan buy or catch these beetles and breed them. Male and female insects will cost about 500 to 1000 yen (approximately five to ten US dollars). This beetle is sold as a pet in department stores[2] in many countries of Asia where it is also frequently depicted in popular media as a common cartoon character for various uses.

Japanese rhinoceros beetles are popular in gambling, especially in the Ryukyu Islands, similar to Siamese fighting fish and cricket fights. In the most popular game, two different male beetles are placed on a log[2] to battle each other, trying to push each other off the log, with the one to stay on the log deemed the winner.

Bibliography

References

  1. Linnaeus C. (1771) Carl Linnaeus Mantissa Plantarum, with an introduction by William T.Stearn, 6:137-588
  2. Japanese rhinoceros beetle in BBC Hidden Kingdoms
  3. Catalogue of Life
  4. Hwang, Seul-Ma-Ro, The Dynastini of the World Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Dynastinae. Published by Nature & Ecology, Korea, 2011
  5. Carnivora Forum
  6. Buchalski, Benjamin; Gutierrez, Eric; Emlen, Douglas; Lavine, Laura; Swanson, Brook (2019-10-15). "Variation in an Extreme Weapon: Horn Performance Differences across Rhinoceros Beetle (Trypoxylus dichotomus) Populations". Insects. 10 (10): E346. doi:10.3390/insects10100346. ISSN 2075-4450. PMC 6835817. PMID 31618906.
  7. Insectic (2021-08-04). "Japanese Rhinoceros Beetle - Species Profile & Facts". Insectic. Retrieved 2022-08-19.
  8. Wada, Noriko; Sunairi, Michio; Anzai, Hirosi; Iwata, Ryûtarô; Yamane, Akiomi; Nakajima, Mutsuyasu (April 2014). "Glycolytic Activities in the Larval Digestive Tract of Trypoxylus dichotomus (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae)". Insects. 5 (2): 351–363. doi:10.3390/insects5020351. ISSN 2075-4450. PMC 4592593. PMID 26462688.
  9. Jl Bao, P Wang, Zhang SJ, et al. Forest-fungus-insect circular ecological breeding method. Patent CN109964723 (A), China, 2019.
  10. Wang, Qingyun; Liu, Liwei; Zhang, Sujiong; Wu, Hong; Huang, Junhao (2022). "A chromosome-level genome assembly and intestinal transcriptome of Trypoxylus dichotomus (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) to understand its lignocellulose digestion ability". GigaScience. 11. doi:10.1093/gigascience/giac059. PMC 9239855. PMID 35764601.
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