Anamorphidae is a family of beetles in the superfamily Coccinelloidea, formerly included within the family Endomychidae. They are found worldwide. Like enchomyids, they are fungivores, with adult and larval stages thought to exclusively consume fungal spores.
FAMILY
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Anamorphidae is a family of beetles in the superfamily Coccinelloidea, formerly included within the family Endomychidae. They are found worldwide. Like enchomyids, they are fungivores, with adult and larval stages thought to exclusively consume fungal spores.
==Genera== After Aclemmysa Reitter, 1904 Acritosoma Pakaluk and Slipinski, 1995 Afralexia Strohecker, 1967 Anagaricophilus Arrow, 1922 Anamorphus LeConte, 1878 Anamycetaea Strohecker, 1975c Asymbius Gorham, 1896 Austroclemmus Strohecker, 1953a Baeochelys Strohecker, 1974b Bryodryas Strohecker, 1974d Bystodes Strohecker, 1953a Bystus Guérin-Méneville, 1857 Catapotia Thomson, 1860 Clemmus Hampe, 1850 Coryphus Csiki, 1902b Cyrtomychus Kolbe, 1910 Cysalemma Dajoz, 1970b Dexialia Sasaji, 1970 Dialexia Gorham, 1887–99 Endocoelus Gorham, 1886 Erotendomychus Lea, 1922 Exysma Gorham, 1891 Exysmodes Dajoz, 1970a Geoendomychus Lea, 1922 Idiophyes Blackburn, 1895 Loeblia Dajoz, 1972a Malagaricophilus Strohecker, 1974d Micropsephodes Champion, 1913 Micropsephus Gorham, 1891 Mychothenus Strohecker, 1953a Papuella Strohecker, 1956a Pararhymbus Arrow, 1920b Parasymbius Arrow, 1920a Rhymbillus Reichensperger, 1915 Rhymbomicrus Casey, 1916 Symbiotes Redtenbacher, 1847 Extinct genera and a species of Symbiotes are known from Eocene aged Baltic and Bitterfeld amber. Members of the extinct genus Palaeosymbius are known from the Late Cretaceous Burmese amber from Myanmar.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).