Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 May 2010
It may perhaps be well to say that by maritime species are meant those Beetles whose habitats are covered by the sea for a considerable time during the flow and ebb of the tide. By sub-maritime species are meant the dwellers at high-tide mark or thereabouts, subjected to occasional wettings by the sea, and the species inhabiting brackish pools and wet places in salt-marshes. The coast species comprise individuals living under stones and rejectamenta, as a rule safe from the reach of high tide, and those peculiar to the roots, leaves and flowers of plants attached to the coast, as well as inhabitants of wooden piles on the shore and the denizens of the ooze of fresh-water trickles on the cliffs—excepting species equally obtainable inland.