Earwigs - The Australian Museum

Skip to main content Skip to acknowledgement of country Skip to footer
gold striped earwig Click to enlarge image
Toggle Caption Gold striped Earwig Image: Bill and Mark Bell © Bill and Mark Bell

Fast Facts

  • Classification Order Dermaptera Class Insecta Subphylum Hexapoda Phylum Arthropoda Kingdom Animalia
  • Number of Species 85
  • Size Range 5 mm - 50 mm

Introduction

Earwigs are rather cryptic, small to medium sized insects distinguished from other insects by a pair of forcep or pincer-like cerci at the end of the abdomen. The name Dermaptera refers to the thickened leathery forewings and is derived from Greek with "derma" meaning skin and "ptera" meaning wings. There are different ideas as to where the English name 'earwig' comes from, including the mistaken belief that earwigs have a tendency to crawl into a sleeping person's ear, or because the hind wings resemble in shape the human ear. Another alternative is that 'earwig' is derived from the Anglo Saxon English "eard" meaning soil and 'wicga' meaning insect.

Identification

Earwigs have an elongated and flattened or cylindrical body. They can be winged or wingless, and they have chewing mouthparts. The abdomen is long, flexible and telescopic (segments of the abdomen may be drawn into one another like a telescope). The two forcep-like cerci on the end of the abdomen are heavily sclerotised (hardened) and vary in shape and size between species. The forewings, called 'tegmina', are short and lack veins. The large, membranous and semicircular hindwings fold up fan-like under the tegmina and can be unfurled or folded very quickly.

They come in a range in colours, including: yellow, yellow brown, orange brown, reddish brown, dark brown and black, and sometimes are a combination of these.

Females can be readily distinguished from males as they are usually smaller, have simple forceps and eight visible abdominal (hind-body) segments as opposed to males, which have ten.

Habitat

Earwigs may be found in protected, moist environments in leaf litter and all kinds of debris on the ground, under bark, under stones, between leaves and some even inhabit crevices at the base of tightly packed and overlapping leaves of Pandanus. Earwigs are usually nocturnal and attracted to lights at night.

Distribution

Earwigs are widely distributed throughout Australia with the highest diversity in the tropics and subtropics. The Australian fauna includes native and introduced species. There are 85 species of Australian earwigs described at present, however it is estimated that there is up to this number again of Australian earwig species yet to be described.

Distribution data sourced from the Atlas of Living Australia

Feeding and diet

Earwigs are mostly omnivorous eating a wide variety of live and decaying plant and animal material. Predominantly plant eating or predatory species are also known.

Other behaviours and adaptations

The forceps are used for defence, catching and carrying prey and sometimes to help unfold the fanlike, membranous hindwing before flight. In some species the male and female may use the forceps to grip each other during copulation.

An unusual family of earwigs (Arixeniidae) parasitize bats. They are wingless and their forceps are much smaller than most other earwigs.

Life history cycle

The earwig lifecycle is an incomplete metamorphosis. This means that when the nymphs (or larvae) hatch from eggs they resemble the adult form. However, the nymphs can be distinguished from adults by having only wing buds, simple almost straight undeveloped forceps, and by their ecdysial line. This is a line down the centre of the head and thorax along which the cuticle splits when the nymphs moult. It is not seen on the final adult form. Nymphs moult four to five times before becoming an adult.

Female earwigs care for their eggs and young nymphs, which is an unusual trait in most non-social insects. Females dig a short burrow on the ground beneath leaf litter and debris where they lay their eggs and which they defend from intruders. The females care for the eggs by collecting them up if they become scattered and clean the eggs by licking off fungus and parasites. After the young nymphs hatch the female feeds them up to the second or third moult, when they can then look after themselves, and at this stage the females may even become cannibalistic.

Management

Most Australian earwig species are not significant as pests. Many species can produce a noxious fluid as a defence. Some can become nuisance pests if present in large numbers. One pest species is the introduced European Earwig (Forficula auricularia), which can be a serious pest of gardens and vegetable crops and is relatively common around suburban homes. Alternatively, an Australian earwig Labidura truncata may be beneficial to agriculture, as it has been observed attacking codling moth (Cydia pomonella) larvae, a pest of fruit crops such as apples, peaches and pears.

References

  • Cassis, G. (1998) Dermaptera. In: Houston, W.W.K & Wells, A. (eds) Zoological Catalogue of Australia. Vol 23. CSIRO Publishing. Australia.
  • Rentz, D.C.F. & Keven, D.K.McE. 1991 Dermaptera (Earwigs). In: Naumann et al. (eds.) Insects of Australia. Melbourne University Press. Australia.
  • Steinmann, H. (1986) Dermaptera, Part 1: Catadermaptera (1) Pygidicranidae. Das Tierreich, 102.
Back to top of main content Go back to top of page

Also in this section

  • Ant-raiding Ant Ant-raiding Ant
  • Vanessa kershawi Australian Painted Lady
  • Green Vegetable Bug
  • Netrocoryne repanda Bronze Flat Butterfly
  • Favoured Footman Favoured Footman Termessa gratiosa (Walker, 1865)
  • Native cockroach Cockroaches: Order Blattodea
  • Scarabaeidae Coleoptera Punctate Flower Chafer Beetle
  • Bee Hawk moth Hawk Moths
  • Jalmenus evagoras evagoras Lycaenid butterflies and ants
  • Lichen moth Lichen Moths (Arctiidae: Lithosiinae)
  • Thopha saccata Double Drummer Cicada
  • Pieris rapae Cabbage White Butterfly

You may also be interested in...

Entomology Collection Area

Life & Geo Sciences Collections

Discover the Australian Museum's extensive Life and Geo Sciences collections and research areas, including the name-bearing type specimens held at the museum.

Why we collect Research areas Find out more K.181119 Lycaenid butterfly - Psychonotis caelius taygetus

Insects

Explore the fascinating world of insects from beautiful butterflies to creepy crawly cockroaches!

Entomology Learn more Dermaptera

Earwigs identification guide

Earwigs belong to the Order Dermaptera.

Discover more Drawer 7 from the John Landy Collection.

The John Landy Butterfly Collection

The John Landy Collection of butterflies (lepidoptera) was donated to the Australian Museum in 2018.

Read more Insect Diagram

What are insects?

In order to answer this question we must look at where insects fit in the animal kingdom. The animal kingdom is divided into several groups called phyla.

Discover more Chrysalis (pupa) of Common Crow or Oleander Butterfly, Euploea core.

Metamorphosis: a remarkable change

Metamorphosis refers to a major change of form or structure during development. One of the most dramatic forms of metamorphosis is the change from the immature insect into the adult form.

Discover more Palaeontology Collection Area 2018

Australian Museum Research Institute (AMRI) staff contacts

Discover the people who care for and study the Australian Museum Research Institute (AMRI) Natural Sciences collections.

Collection ManagersGroup ManagersResearch staff Find out more

Australian Museum Magazine Volume 07 Issue 09

AM Publication Read more

The insect fauna of Funafuti. IV. The insect fauna

AM Journal Article Read more Coleoptera

Beetles identification guide

Beetles, which include weevils, belong to the Order Coleoptera.

Discover more You have reached the end of the main content. Go back to start of main content Go back to top of page Back to top You have reached the end of the page. Thank you for reading. Photo of two painted shields

The Australian Museum respects and acknowledges the Gadigal people as the First Peoples and Traditional Custodians of the land and waterways on which the Museum stands.

Image credit: gadigal yilimung (shield) made by Uncle Charles Chicka Madden

Close modal dialog Search website Submit Search Close Modal Dialog Close Modal Dialog Close Modal Dialog Close Modal Dialog

Tag » Why Are They Called Earwigs