Adephagans diverged from their sister group in the
Late Permian, the most recent common ancestor of living adephagans probably existing in the early
Triassic, around 240 million years ago. Both aquatic and terrestrial representatives of the suborder appear in fossil records of the late Triassic. The Jurassic fauna consisted of
trachypachids, carabids, gyrinids, and
haliplid-like forms. The familial and tribal diversification of the group spans the
Mesozoic, with a few tribes radiating explosively during the
Tertiary. The adephagans were formerly grouped into the Geadephaga with the two terrestrial families Carabidae and Trachypachidae and the Hydradephaga, for the aquatic families. However this is no longer used as the Hydradephaga are not a monophyletic group. Modern analysis has supported the clade Dytiscoidea instead, which includes many aquatic adephagans, notably excluding Gyrinidae.
Rhysodidae is suggested to represent a subgroup of Carabidae rather than a distinct family, with
Cicindelidae often being treated as a distinct family from Carabidae.
Cladogram of the relationships of living adephagan families after Vasilikopoulos et al. 2021 and Baca et al. 2021: |1= |bar1=cyan |2= }} }} == See also ==