iHerp Australia Issue 4 | Page 12

Anyone who is an avid insect collector will immedi- ately identify with Zahl's excitement at receiving this unusual package. Titanus giganteus was first described by Linneaus in 1771, and to this day no one knows where he obtained a specimen. In the middle of the 19 th century specimens were occasionally found drowned and washed up on the shores of the Rio Negro near Manaus and, even more remarkably, discovered intact in the stomachs of large fish being prepared for the table. The intrepid British ento- mologist Henry Walter Bates, who spent 11 years documenting the beetle fauna of the Amazon basin between 1848 and 1859, was well aware of Titanus. Although he tried very hard he only managed to find a few imperfect specimens to send back to England for sale. For many years the only specimens that made it to Europe resulted from these chance encounters, and so lucrative was the very limited trade in Titanus at the time that enterprising individuals would hoard incomplete and rotting specimens recovered from rivers to 'construct' perfect specimens for sale. To purchase a complete Titanus in 1914 cost the princely sum of 2,000 gold marks (the equivalent of around $11,500 US today) and wealthy collectors would hire steam vessels to meet incoming ships while still at sea to select the biggest specimens. Up until 1938 only about 30 specimens had been found, and the bulk of these were males. Not a great deal had changed by the time of Zahl's 1957 expedition, which yielded a further 16 male specimens (all of which flew to powerful security lights around the mine site) together with, importantly, all the necessary clues as to how to collect Titanus in numbers. For some reason, Zahl's 1959 article failed to have much of an apparent impact on beetle collectors, because Titanus was still considered rare up until the mid-1980s. It was at this time that the link between powerful lights and being able to collect Titanus in commercial quantities began to gain widespread acceptance, after the French built a rocket-launching facility in their South American territory of French Guiana. Several facts became much better known quite quickly. Firstly, Titanus was far from being rare. Its rarity was a perception only and powerful light traps placed in primary rainforest during the beetle's relatively short flying period of 4-8 weeks could yield a reliable annual pulse of specimens. Today, hundreds of male specimens are collected annually from light traps set up in French Guiana and also the Peruvian Amazon. Prices have come down dramatically for average-sized specimens but really large ones still command in excess of $1,000 US each. Females have never been collected at light traps and the handful that are known have all been found opportunistically wandering on the ground or drowned in rivers; they still fetch very high prices when they occasionally come onto the market. In spite of its legendary status over the centuries, we still have no reliable data on the beetle's life cycle and its breeding sites are not known with