Catharsius molossus explained

Catharsius molossus is a species of dung beetle in the family Scarabaeidae.

Description

Catharsius molossus can reach a length of about 25- in the females, about in males. This species is completely black, the body is short and convex, quite hairy on the ventral side and usually with a short conical horn in the centre of the head of the males. Pronotum is densely granulated and elytra are finely striated. It is used in traditional Chinese medicine for detoxification, swelling and constipation.[1]

Distribution

Catharsius molossus is one of the most widespread and abundant coprophagous species in tropical Asian regions. It occurs in the Palearctic realm (Afghanistan, Nepal, Sikkim, China, Taiwan), and in the Oriental realm (India, Sri Lanka, Andaman Islands, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Malaysia, Timor, and Flores).

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Deyrup . ST . Stagnitti . NC . Perpetua . MJ . Wong-Deyrup . SW . Drug Discovery Insights from Medicinal Beetles in Traditional Chinese Medicine. . Biomolecules & Therapeutics . 1 March 2021 . 29 . 2 . 105–126 . 10.4062/biomolther.2020.229 . 33632986 . 7921859 .