The whirligig beetles are water beetles, comprising the family Gyrinidae, that usually swim on the surface of the water if undisturbed, though they swim underwater when threatened. They get their common name from their habit of swimming rapidly in circles when alarmed, and are also notable for their divided eyes which are believed to enable them to see both above and below water. The family includes some 700 extant species worldwide, in 15 genera, plus a few fossil species. Most species are very similar in general appearance, though they vary in size from perhaps 3 mm to 18 mm in length. They tend to be flattened and rounded in cross section, in plain view as seen from above, and in longitudinal section. In fact their shape is a good first approximation to an ellipsoid, with legs and other appendages fitting closely into a streamlined surface. Whirligig beetles belong to the beetle suborder Adephaga, which also includes ground beetles and diving beetles.
Description
left|thumb|Illustration of [[Gyrinus convexiusculus, with arrows pointing to the two pairs of eyes]]
Whirligig beetles are most conspicuous for their bewildering swimming. They can be difficult to see if they are not moving or are under water. Most species are coloured steely grey or bronze. Their integument is finely sculpted with little pits; it is hard and elastic and produces a water repellent waxy outer layer, which is constantly supplemented. Among other functions, the lubricant layer and smooth outline make the beetles difficult to hold on to if caught.
The antennae are unusual among beetles, being short and plump, and placed about at water level. The compound eyes are remarkable for each being divided into a higher part that is above water level when a beetle is floating passively, and a lower part that is below water level.
The adult beetles carry a bubble of air trapped beneath their elytra. This allows them to dive and swim under well-oxygenated water for indefinite periods if necessary. The mechanism is sophisticated and amounts to a physical gill. In practice though, their ecological adaptation is for the adults to scavenge and hunt on the water surface, so they seldom stay down for long. The larvae have paired plumose tracheal gills on each of the first eight abdominal segments.
Generally, gyrinids lay their eggs underwater, attached to water plants, typically in rows. Like the adults, the larvae are active predators, largely benthic inhabitants of the stream bed and aquatic plants. They have long thoracic legs with paired claws. Their mandibles are curved, pointed, and pierced with a sucking canal. In this they resemble the larvae of many other predatory water beetles, such as the Dytiscidae. Mature larvae pupate in a cocoon that also is attached to water plants.
thumb|Larva and adult
thumb|Gyrinus head, lateral aspect showing placement of antenna and divided compound eye
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|thumb|none|Hind leg of Gyrinus
|thumb|none|Antenna of Gyrinus
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Taxonomy
Whirligig beetles were previously grouped with other aquatic members of the Adephaga such as Dytiscidae, as members of the group "Hydradephaga". However based on molecular evidence they are currently thought to be the earliest diverging lineage of the Adephaga, and to have evolved their aquatic ecology independently from other adephagans. Cladogram after Vasilikopoulos et al. 2021
Internal taxonomy
Taxonomy after
- Spanglerogyrinae
- Angarogyrus - Early Jurassic-Early Cretaceous, Asia
- Spanglerogyrus - North America
- Heterogyrinae
- Mesogyrus - Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous, Asia
- Heterogyrus - Madagascar
- Cretotortor - Late Cretaceous-Paleocene (Asia)
- Baissogyrus - Zaza Formation, Russia, Early Cretaceous (Aptian)
- Gyrininae
- Dineutini
- Cretodineutus - Burmese amber, Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian)
- Cretogyrus - Burmese amber, Cenomanian
- Dineutus
- Enhydrus
- Macrogyrus (including Andogyrus )
- Mesodineutes - Darmakan Formation, Russia, Danian
- Miodineutes - Germany, Miocene
- Porrorhynchus
- Gyrinini
- Aulonogyrus
- Gyrinoides
- Gyrinus
- Metagyrinus
- Orectochilini
- Gyretes
- Orectochilus
- Orectogyrus
- Patrus
- Chimerogyrus
