Diving beetle
The diving beetle is a bug in the Animal Crossing series. It first appeared in Doubutsu no Mori e+ and have appeared in all subsequent games except Animal Crossing: Wild World. They appear on the surface of bodies of freshwater, occasionally diving under. In Animal Crossing: New Horizons, it can be caught from late spring to early fall.
Catch details[edit]
In Doubutsu no Mori e+[edit]
In City Folk[edit]
Description | These are said to have short but strong pincers. Ouch! |
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Time of year | May – Sep |
Time of day | 8 AM – 5 PM |
Peak times | N/A |
Location | On rivers and ponds |
Bug size | 38 mm |
Rarity | Very uncommon |
Selling price | 800 Bells |
Furniture size |
In New Leaf[edit]
Time of year | May – Sep |
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Time of day | 8 AM – 5 PM |
Peak times | N/A |
Location | On rivers and ponds |
Size | 38 mm |
Rarity | Uncommon |
Selling price | 800 Bells |
Furniture size |
In New Horizons[edit]
Time of year | North: May – Sep South: Nov – Mar |
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Time of day | 8 AM – 7 PM |
Location | On rivers and ponds |
Weather | Any weather |
Spawn requirement | Appears from the start of the game |
Selling prices | Nook's Cranny: 800 Bells Flick: 1,200 Bells |
Furniture size |
Donating to the museum[edit]
In City Folk[edit]
If the player donates the diving beetle to the museum, Blathers will make a comment on it.
It can be found in the bottom-left hand enclosure in the insect exhibition, in the small pond.
In New Leaf[edit]
Upon being donated, the beetle can be found in the first room of the bug exhibit swimming in the pond just outside the butterfly house.
In New Horizons[edit]
When donated, the diving beetle can be found swimming in the southwestern water tank of the bug exhibit. It shares this habitat with the pondskater, giant water bug, and some donated fish.
Gallery[edit]
Real-world information[edit]
Adult beetles have streamlined, oval, or football-shaped flattened bodies that are usually 12-25 millimeters (1/8-1 inch) long. Most species are brown to black but some have distinctive patterns of spots, lines, or mottling on the wing covers. They have elongate hairlike antennae. Larvae are not frequently seen and have a long thorax and long legs. The head bears conspicuous large sickle-shaped mandibles without teeth.
Predaceous diving beetles are easily confused with water scavenger beetles (Coleoptera: Hydrophilidae). The latter surface for air head first and have a ridge or keel on the underside that runs down the thorax and extends into a point.
Names in other languages[edit]
ゲンゴロウ gengorō |
Diving beetle (etymology unknown) | |
물방개 mulbanggae |
Diving beetle | |
龙虱 lóngshī |
Diving beetle (lit. "dragon louse") | |
龍蝨 Unknown |
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Плавунец Plavunets |
Diving beetle | |
Waterroofkever | "Water predator Beetle" | |
Schwimmkäfer | "Swimming beetle" | |
Escarabajo Nadador | "Swimming beetle" | |
Dytique | From family name Dysticidae | |
Ditisco | From family name Dysticidae |
Notes[edit]
- ↑ All bugs and fish in the first-generation games can appear at a lower spawn rate up to five days before the start of their first month of availability.
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