Ptinus tectus, often called the Australian spider beetle, is a species of beetle in the family Ptinidae, or family Anobiidae, subfamily Ptininae. It is a cosmopolitan species (arrived in Europe and the UK from Australia in 1900). It is a pest of stored foods and museum specimens.
P. tectus Boieldieu, 1856 is the name most often used for this species. Some works still state Ptinus ocellus Brown, 1929.
The Australian spider beetle (Pictus tectus) measures 2.5âÂÂ4 mm in length and is coloured dark brown. The adults have biting mouthparts, a well developed thorax and 11-segmented antennae. Characteristics which give them a spider-like appearance include a stout body, pronounced constriction of the neck shield and 6 long thin legs with 5-segmented tarsi.
The female Australian spider beetle lays 100âÂÂ120 sticky eggs over a period of 4âÂÂ5 weeks in early summer, either singly or in small batches. At 20âÂÂ25 ðC the eggs hatch in 3âÂÂ16 days, producing larvae which are fleshy, curved, covered with fine hairs and relatively immobile. Larval development takes at least 6 weeks, during which time the larvae moult 4 or 5 times. When mature, they wander in search of a pupation site where they spin a cocoon cell in which to pupate. Adults emerge after 20 to 30 days and will live for as long 12 months.
At 70% R.H. development of Ptinus tectus from egg laying to emergence from the cocoon takes an average of about 62 days at 23âÂÂ25 ðC; at 15 ðC the time taken is about 130 days. The minimum temperature at which complete development can occur is 10 ðC and the maximum is between 28 and 30 ðC. Considerable mortality occurs in eggs and larvae at 28 ðC.
The species is considered as a pest in museums. It is recorded from at least 55 museums and historic houses in the United Kingdom.