H. diminuta requires two hosts: rats and beetles. Beetles like the mealworm beetle, Tenebrio molitor, host larval stages of H. diminuta until they reach the infective cysticercoid stage. When cysts are fed to rats, the juvenile tapeworm emerges and takes up residence in the small intestine. A newly existed tapeworm is barely 0.2 mm in length but will reach an equilibrium length of 60 cm in the rat. The adults grow by adding hermaphroditic segments/proglottids that become increasingly mature toward the posterior ends, and cross-fertilize to become gravid. Through the process of apolysis, gravid proglottids are shed with the rat excrement where they can be consumed by a beetle to complete the life cycle