Volume 3 covers a large number of families which exhibit a wide range of morphologies and ways of life, including the familiar dor beetles, stag beetles, dung beetles and chafers, jewel beetles, click beetles, glow-worms, soldier beetles, chequered beetles, ladybirds, darkling beetles, false blister beetles, oil beetles and cardinal beetles.
Volume 3 features:
- keys to 1088 species in 69 families, with family and genus introductions;
- detailed species notes including supporting characters, habitat, phenology, distribution and abundance;
- a bibliography;
- 79 colour plates with 473 photographs of selected species;
- and an index to scientific and English names.
Families in this volume:
Geotrupidae (dor beetles)
Trogidae (hide beetles)
Lucanidae (stag beetles)
Scarabaeidae (scarab beetles, dung beetles and chafers)
Eucinetidae (plate-thigh beetles)
Clambidae (fringe-winged beetles)
Scirtidae (marsh beetles)
Dascillidae (soft-bodied plant beetles)
Buprestidae (jewel beetles)
Byrrhidae (pill beetles)
Elmidae (riffle beetles)
Dryopidae (long-toed water beetles)
Limnichidae (minute marsh-loving beetles)
Heteroceridae (variegated mud-loving beetles)
Psephenidae (water penny beetles)
Ptilodactylidae (ptilodactylid beetles)
Eucnemidae (false click beetles)
Throscidae (throscid beetles)
Elateridae (click beetles)
Drilidae (false firefly beetles)
Lycidae (net-winged beetles)
Lampyridae (glow-worms)
Cantharidae (soldier beetles)
Derodontidae (tooth-necked fungus beetles)
Dermestidae (skin beetles)
Bostrichidae (auger beetles)
Ptinidae (anobiid and spider beetles)
Lymexylidae (ship-timber beetles)
Phloiophilidae (phloiophilid beetles)
Trogossitidae (trogossitid beetles)
Thanerocleridae (false chequered beetles)
Cleridae (chequered beetles)
Melyridae (soft-winged flower beetles)
Byturidae (fruitworm beetles)
Sphindidae (cryptic slime-mould beetles)
Biphyllidae (false skin beetles)
Erotylidae (pleasing fungus beetles)
Monotomidae (root-eating beetles)
Cryptophagidae (silken fungus beetles)
Silvanidae (silvanid beetles)
Cucujidae (flat bark beetles)
Phalacridae (shining flower beetles)
Laemophloeidae (line flat bark beetles)
Kateretidae (short-winged flower beetles)
Nitidulidae (sap beetles)
Bothrideridae (bothriderid beetles)
Cerylonidae (cerylonid beetles)
Alexiidae (alexiid beetles)
Endomychidae (handsome fungus beetles)
Coccinellidae (ladybirds)
Corylophidae (corylophid beetles)
Latridiidae (mould beetles)
Mycetophagidae (hairy fungus beetles)
Ciidae (ciid beetles)
Tetratomidae (polypore fungus beetles)
Melandryidae (false darkling beetles)
Mordellidae (tumbling flower beetles)
Ripiphoridae (ripiphorid beetles)
Zopheridae (zopherid beetles)
Tenebrionidae (darkling beetles)
Oedemeridae (false blister beetles)
Meloidae (blister beetles)
Mycteridae (mycterid beetles)
Pythidae (dead-log beetles)
Pyrochroidae (cardinal beetles)
Salpingidae (narrow-waisted bark beetles)
Anthicidae (ant-like flower beetles)
Aderidae (ant-like leaf beetles)
Scraptiidae (false flower beetles)
"[...] A total of 69 families is covered in this volume, including [...] families comprised predominantly of small to minute, generally dull-coloured species that are notoriously difficult to identify [...]. For these latter families in particular, this is the first time that up-to-date accounts of all British species have been available in a single volume. Previously we have had to rely on a plethora of books and papers, which were sometimes difficult to obtain and often not in English; all these can now be relegated to the back of the filing cabinet. [...] This book is very well produced, with a substantial hardback and additional dust cover, which should prove very robust. It may seem a minor point to some, but to me an outstanding advantage of these books is that one can open them at a particular page, lay them on the desk and they will stay open. In contrast, for softbacks I find I have to keep my hand on the book to stop it snapping shut; an impossible task when focusing a microscope with one hand and manipulating a specimen with the other. The author always said that it was his intention to produce good-quality hardbacks and this was definitely the correct decision, even if it does mean that the price is slightly higher; these books are an investment for life. [...] . Anyone interested in identifying and studying beetles simply cannot afford to be without them and any quibbles can only be minor. Andrew cannot be too highly commended for his diligence and hard work to make so much information available to all."
– Richard Wright, British Wildlife 32(5), April 2021