God has an Enemy - Cremastocheilus Beetle
God has an enemy - Cremastocheilus Beetle
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the Americas a little brown or black beetle lives that most
of us would not even notice. In fact, most of you would probably
just step on it if you came across it. But, this little beetle
has a fascinating story.
This beetle happens to be a parasite. We usually think of a
parasite as something that lives in or on us and makes us sick
or itch. But this beetle is a parasite on ants!
Its name is Cremastocheilus (Kree-mast-oh-kyle'-us), sometimes
called the anteater scarab and is nothing special to look at.
But, it has an incredible ability. It is able to change the way
it smells.
If you are familiar with ants, then you know that they are able
to recognize others in their colonies with their marvelous sense
of smell. They cannot do it by sight, because they cannot see
very well. In fact, some ants are totally blind. So, when two
ants meet, they will stroke the other ant with their antennae
collecting minute amounts of chemicals in special receptors that
allow them to identify if the other ant is friend or foe.
Incredibly, the Cremastocheilus beetle can change the way it
smells. When it is time for the female beetle to lay her eggs,
she will go to an ant nest and walk up to the entrance. She then
changes the way she smells so that the ants will think that she
is an ant from that colony.
Once she has passed the guards, she makes her way down into the
ant nest and finds the nursery. She then lays her eggs in with
the ant eggs.
When the baby beetle hatches, it smells like a baby ant. But, it
does not eat what baby ants eat. It eats baby ants! The ants
take care of it anyway, because to them it smells right.
When the baby beetle gets big enough, it will pupate and then
become an adult. As an adult, it leaves the ant nest to find
another adult beetle to mate with. The female will then find
another ant nest and start the cycle over again.
When I think of this beetle, it reminds me a lot of God's enemy,
sin. We are so blind, that in many respects we are just like the
ant. We think that sin is normal in our lives and so we just
tend to ignore it. We need special direction from God to
recognize and destroy the sin in our lives.
If we don't get rid of the sin, it will destroy the most
precious things in our lives and eventually kill us as well.
Let's ask God to help us to find the parasites in our lives and
destroy them.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Resources
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I have not been able to find common books with pictures of
Cremastocheilus in them. However, there are a few published on
the web. I suggest going to Google.com and clicking on the
images tab. Then search for cremastocheilus and you should be
able to find an image or two.
If you want to collect some specimens, the easiest way to do
that is to put a large flat rock on the nest of one of the large
carpenter ant colonies found in most pine forests. You can tell
them, because they make a large pile of pine needles and if you
listen, you can hear them rustling around inside. To catch some,
place a large flat rock on the side of the nest. Come back in a
few days when the sun has been warming up the rock. One of these
beetles can often be found warming up under the rock.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tracking God News IS PUBLISHED BY: http://www.trackinggod.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright 2002 Ron McCluskey You may reproduce this newsletter
in part or in whole providing that you include the website,
contact information and resource links.