Beetle ID Please!

Hello,

I assume these are all the same species, or same family at least. Can someone ID them? Thank you!

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IMG_20140725_124418.jpg

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Wow talk about work, photobucket links would simply not show up when pasted and the photos were too big to upload via attached thumbnail so I had to learn how to resize!

In addition to IDing, can someone explain to me what I was doing wrong? I have used photobucket before for such things with no problems. The links show up when pasted to Word, but the cursor flashes and nothing appears here on the forum for some reason.

2 of these beetles are similar in appearance with the one between the rock and the "wall" having ridges around it's center section etc.

The other one was missing those ridges.

The 3rd is really smooth, but was aggressively mauling left over food for the other 2 beetles which have been in there for a few days. Not aggressive towards the other beetles as far as I know though. They all congregate under the cocohut during the day =).

These are my sons beetles, but I want to make sure reasonable care is being provided for them.

At any rate any help with pic posting via photobucket, or beetle ID is welcome!

Thank you for the help!

 
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The first one is a ground beetle. It should not be kept with the other two because it is carnivorous and might kill/harm the other two. It will eat live mealworms and cat/dog food. The other two are darkling beetles, they will eat cat/dog food and fruits and veggies. They like a drier habitat while ground beetles like their cage moist. Hope this helps!

 
Thank you for the help! I have removed him from that enclosure. What kind of lifespan do they have, and do the ridges on the one mean anything noteworthy, or just that the beetle has ridges?

 
Darklings can live a year or more, but we don't know how old they currently are. You have 2 different species there, one type has ridges, the other does not, that's all.

Beautiful bugs!

 
So how often do these ground beetles burrow? We thought that he performed a miracle and escaped, but excavation reveals him burrowed to nearly the bottom of the 8 inches of substrate in his enclosure. 1 waxworm was offered and I assume he ate it, but it might also have burrowed.

 
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