Scarabs (family Scarabaeidae, order Coleoptera) have antennae that end in a kind of club, made up of several movable plates. The males of many species have horns, which they use when fighting over females. Eggs are laid ¡V and larvae can be found - in soil, the dung of herbivorous mammals, rotten wood, and decaying matter. Some adult dung beetles use their hindlegs to roll fresh dung away in balls before burying the balls and laying their eggs inside. Others bury dung where it is. They can be found worldwide on dung, carrion, decaying matter, fungi, and vegetation; under bark; and in the burrows of vertebrates or in ant and termite nests.
Approximate Dimensions: 1.5"x1"x0.5"
Glows bright green in the dark when first charged in bright light!