Summer Chafer — The Small Brown Beetle That Most People Walk Past
“Not every clumsy brown beetle is a May bug — this one is its smaller summer cousin.”
A few days ago, near the River Thames, I found a small brown beetle about 18 mm long. At first glance, it would have been very easy to dismiss it as “just a beetle”, or perhaps mistake it for a small May bug. It was brown, rather hairy, slightly clumsy, and looked as though it had not read the flying manual properly.
But when you stop, look closely and ask the obvious biological question — what exactly is this? — a whole hidden world opens up.
The beetle was a Summer Chafer, Amphimallon solstitiale, also sometimes called the European June Beetle. It is one of those creatures that lives its life around us while most people never notice it at all.
And that, I think, is a real problem for biology education.
Biology Is Not Just Something in a Textbook
Many biology students can tell you the definition of a habitat, food chain, ecosystem, adaptation or life cycle. They may be able to label diagrams, write exam answers and remember the correct keywords.
But then they walk through a garden, across a school field, along a riverbank or past a hedge and do not see the living biology happening all around them.
They see “flies”.
They see “bugs”.
They see “weeds”.
They see “a bird”.
They see “something crawling”.
What they often do not see is the complexity.
A beetle is not just a beetle. It has a life cycle, a habitat, feeding relationships, predators, adaptations, behaviours and a role in the ecosystem. It may spend years hidden underground as a larva before appearing for a brief adult stage in summer. It may be food for birds, mammals or other invertebrates. It may feed on leaves or roots. It may be part of the huge, mostly invisible machinery that keeps ecosystems functioning.
That is real biology.
Meet the Summer Chafer
The Summer Chafer is a medium-sized brown beetle, smaller than the familiar Common Cockchafer or May bug. It is usually around 16–20 mm long, with brown wing cases, a hairy body and a rather rounded end to the abdomen.
It is not an elegant flyer.
Like many chafers, it often appears slightly confused by the modern world. It may fly at dusk, bump into lights, crash into windows, land upside down, or blunder around with great determination and very little grace.
But that apparent clumsiness hides a perfectly successful survival strategy. The adult beetles appear in summer, often around June, July and August, especially at dusk. They may be found around meadows, hedgerows, woodland edges and gardens.
In other words, exactly the sort of places students walk through without noticing anything.
A Life Mostly Spent Underground
One of the most interesting things about the Summer Chafer is that the adult beetle is only the most visible part of the story.
For much of its life, it exists as a grub underground.
Chafer grubs are the pale, curved, C-shaped larvae that live in soil. They have brownish heads and small legs near the front of the body. Some species feed on decaying organic matter, while others feed on roots. Summer Chafer larvae can feed underground on plant roots and may spend two or three years developing before finally pupating and emerging as adult beetles.
That means the beetle we see flying clumsily around a garden light in summer may have spent years hidden beneath our feet.
This is a wonderful teaching point.
A student may look at a beetle and think, “There it is.”
But biology asks, “Where has it been? What did it feed on? What fed on it? What conditions did it need? Why has it emerged now? How does it find a mate? What happens next?”
Those questions are where biology becomes exciting.
Is It a Pest or a Useful Part of Nature?
This is where biology becomes more subtle.
Some chafer grubs can damage lawns and plant roots, especially if they occur in large numbers. Gardeners may notice patches of grass turning yellow or being pulled up by birds, foxes or badgers searching for grubs. That does not mean every chafer grub is a disaster, and it certainly does not mean every beetle should be destroyed on sight.
Nature is rarely that simple.
The same grub that annoys a lawn owner may be part of a food web. The same beetle that nibbles leaves may become food for another animal. The same insect that is treated as a nuisance in one setting may be an important part of biodiversity in another.
This is a valuable lesson for students. Biology is not divided neatly into “good animals” and “bad animals”. A species may be beneficial, harmful, neutral or simply inconvenient depending on the situation.
The Summer Chafer is not a villain. It is a living organism trying to survive.
The Problem With Not Looking
I sometimes think that one of the greatest barriers to learning biology is not lack of intelligence, but lack of attention.
Students are surrounded by biology every day, but many have not been trained to look. They walk past lichens on walls, moss in paving cracks, insects under leaves, fungi in damp corners, birds feeding on lawns, pond skaters on water and beetles on paths.
They are living in a giant outdoor laboratory but treating it as background scenery.
This is why I love using real examples in teaching. A beetle found near the River Thames can lead to a discussion of classification, adaptation, life cycles, habitats, food webs, biodiversity, human impact, pest control, conservation and scientific observation.
One small insect can become an entire lesson.
Turning a Beetle Into a Biology Lesson
If I were using the Summer Chafer with a student, I would not simply say, “This is a Summer Chafer. Learn the name.”
That would miss the point.
Instead, I might ask:
What features can you see?
The body shape, colour, legs, antennae, wing cases and hairs all give clues.
How big is it?
A ruler or calipers immediately turns a casual sighting into a measurement.
Where was it found?
Habitat matters. Was it near grass, trees, hedges, water, lights or disturbed soil?
What time of day was it active?
Many beetles behave differently at dusk or at night.
What might it eat?
Adults and larvae may feed on different things, which links beautifully to life cycles.
What might eat it?
Birds, mammals and other invertebrates may all be part of the story.
How could we record it properly?
A photograph, date, location and identification notes turn an observation into useful natural-history data.
This is how students learn to think scientifically. Not by memorising isolated facts, but by asking better questions.
From “That’s a Bug” to “That’s an Ecosystem”
The Summer Chafer also gives us a route into a much bigger discussion: the decline of insect awareness.
People worry, quite rightly, about large animals. They notice birds, deer, foxes and badgers. But insects are often ignored unless they sting, bite, buzz around food or enter the house.
That is a mistake.
Insects pollinate, recycle, aerate soil, provide food for other animals, break down waste, regulate populations and form a huge part of terrestrial biodiversity. Remove insects from an ecosystem and many other things begin to fail.
The problem is that insects are small. Their work is quiet. Their importance is often invisible.
A Summer Chafer bumping into a light on a warm evening is not just a comedy beetle. It is a reminder that we share the world with thousands of smaller lives, most of which we barely understand.
Encouraging Insects Rather Than Ignoring Them
If we want students to care about biology, we need to help them see it first.
That can start very simply:
Leave some areas of grass a little longer.
Grow a mixture of plants rather than a sterile lawn.
Avoid unnecessary pesticide use.
Keep hedges, leaf litter and wild corners where possible.
Create log piles and undisturbed soil areas.
Plant for pollinators.
Look closely before tidying everything away.
A perfectly neat garden may look controlled, but it is often poorer for wildlife. A slightly wilder garden may contain far more life, more stories and more opportunities for discovery.
This does not mean letting everything become a jungle. It means understanding that nature needs somewhere to live.
Why This Matters in Education
GCSE and A-Level Biology can become very exam-focused. Of course students need exam technique. They need keywords, practical skills, data handling and strong written answers.
But biology must not become a subject that only exists on paper.
A student who notices a beetle, photographs it, measures it, identifies it, researches its habitat and asks what role it plays in an ecosystem is doing real biology.
They are observing.
They are questioning.
They are collecting evidence.
They are making links.
They are thinking like a scientist.
That is far more powerful than simply being told to memorise another definition.
Conclusion: Open Your Eyes and Biology Appears
The Summer Chafer is not rare enough to cause national excitement, not large enough to frighten anyone, and not colourful enough to make most people stop in their tracks.
But that is exactly why it matters.
It represents the wildlife we usually miss.
The small brown beetle on the path.
The grub beneath the soil.
The insect flying at dusk.
The creature dismissed as “just a bug”.
Biology is not only found in laboratories, textbooks and examination papers. It is also found on riverbanks, in gardens, under leaves, beneath the soil and around the lights on a summer evening.
The next time a clumsy brown beetle bumps into a window or lands on the path, do not just brush it aside.
Stop.
Look.
Ask what it is.
Because once students begin to notice the small things, the whole living world becomes much bigger.

