Currently seven species are recognised •
Sceliages adamastor LePeletier & Serville, 1828 - Cape, Orange Free State •
Sceliages augias Gillet, 1908 - Zambia, Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo •
Sceliages brittoni Zur Strassen, 1965 - Cape •
Sceliages difficilis Zur Strassen, 1965 - Zimbabwe, Natal, Transvaal, Gauteng •
Sceliages gagates Shipp, 1895 - Mozambique, Natal, Eastern Cape, Eswatini •
Sceliages granulatus Forgie & Grebennikov & Scholtz, 2002 - Northern Cape, Botswana •
Sceliages hippias Westwood, 1844 - Natal, Transvaal, Mpumalanga The sacred scarab,
Scarabaeus sacer Linnaeus (1758), was once idolised by ancient Egyptians as the incarnation of the god
Khepri, who guided the sun's path across the heavens. The Scarabaeini may have evolved with other scarabaeines during the
Cenozoic, stemming from lineages originating in the
Lower Cretaceous or possibly as far back as the
Lower Jurassic some 180–200 million years ago. Westwood felt that
Ateuchus adamastor (
Sceliages adamastor) did not differ enough from
Scarabaeus (by an extra pair of spurs on the tibia) to merit generic separation. ==Ecology==