Weevils, small heads, but the muzzle is long like an elephant trunk, so it is called a weevil.
Weevils are the largest family of Coleoptera insects and the most diverse in the insect kingdom. Body lengths vary from 2.8 mm (rice elephants) to 20 mm large (e.g., elephant nose worms). When disturbed, the weevil immediately curled into a ball and fell to the ground or rolled from the leaf surface to the ground, and escaped.

Rice elephant, commonly known as: rice worm
Rice elephant, commonly known as: rice worm. The body length is 2.8 mm, which is less than the length of a grain of rice. They are often found in the rice of the family. Male and female worms live in rice bags all their lives, mating their tails and laying eggs. The larvae are white and decay in the grains, and eventually the entire grain of rice is hollowed out. Insect control method: The rice bag can be stored in the freezer of the refrigerator for more than an hour and then removed, and the rice elephants, eggs and larvae in the bag will die.
Triaconoid weevil - female, also known as: broad-beaked cone. Body length 13-23mm
Curly leaf weevil, body length: 8 mm
Brown long-necked curl leaf weevil with a body length of about 6 mm
It is an oblique elephant nose worm with a body length of 8 to 15 mm
Trick dead slanted elephant nose worm
Velvet-tailed weevil, 12-15 mm long
weevil
Elephant nose worm, also known as: bamboo shoot turtle. Body length 15-20mm.
Elephant nose worms, females lay eggs in the muzzle of the shoot tip to form a hole, and then lay the eggs inside. The larvae feed on the base of the bamboo shoots, and the adults nibble on the tenderer bamboo stems to suck up the sap. It is found in bamboo forests from flat to low-altitude mountainous areas. Adults appear in April-December.