← All animals
insect
A male Hercules beetle on a rock, its glossy body and two long curved horns clearly visible, with a female beetle resting behind it. Real photograph
Real photograph Franz Xaver, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 3.0

Hercules beetle

Dynastes hercules

say it HUR-kyuh-leez BEE-tuhl

Why we love them

The Hercules beetle is a gentle giant of the insect world, and it is one of the biggest and strongest beetles anywhere. It lives in the warm, green rainforests of Central and South America, wandering across the leafy forest floor. Its shiny body is large enough to fill the palm of your hand, which makes it a real heavyweight among bugs.

The most amazing thing about a male Hercules beetle is his pair of long horns — one curving up from his head and a much bigger one from his back. Together they look a bit like a giant claw. But do not worry: these horns are harmless. Males use them to gently wrestle each other, trying to lift a rival off a branch to win the best spot. Female beetles have no horns at all.

Here is a clever trick. The beetle’s hard wing cases can seem to change colour. When the air is dry, they look a soft yellow or olive-green, but when the air turns damp, they darken almost to black. Scientists think this colour-changing shell may help the beetle hide among the shifting light and shadows of the busy rainforest.

Before it becomes a beetle, a Hercules spends a long time as a plump, curled-up grub. The grub lives inside soft, rotting logs and slowly munches the old wood, growing bigger and bigger until it is heavier than a mouse. Then it changes into an adult. Grown-up beetles are gentle plant-eaters that sip and nibble sweet, fallen fruit like ripe bananas and mangoes on the forest floor.

No one has given the Hercules beetle an official conservation grade yet, which is common for insects, so its status is “not evaluated.” The best way to help giants like this is to look after the rainforests where they live, keeping the tall trees, fallen logs, and ripe fruit that the beetles and their grubs need.

My home

Tropical forest, rainforest

Where I live

North America, South America

What I eat

Rotting fruit, decaying wood

How long I am

0.05–0.17 m

The Hercules beetle is one of the largest and strongest insects in the world, and big males can measure up to about 17 centimetres long, from the tip of the horn to the tail.

Only the males grow the long horns, and they are completely harmless — a male uses them to gently wrestle other males and try to lift a rival off a branch.

The beetle's wing cases can change colour with the weather, looking yellowish or olive-green when the air is dry and turning darker when it is damp.

Every hercules beetle can feel happy, scared and loved — just like you.

Looking after my friends

Not checked yet

No one has counted them carefully yet.

You can help by learning their names, keeping wild places clean, and telling someone why this animal matters.

Official status: not evaluated (IUCN)

Where this came from