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Sculptures by Phyllis Bone


INTRODUCTION  -  THE IMPORTANCE OF BEETLES  -  WOOD BORING & PESTIFEROUS BEETLES

GENERAL FAMILIES / NOVEL BEETLES  -  REFERENCES


WOOD BORING AND PESTIFEROUS BEETLES

Family Cerambycidae (Longhorn beetles)

This family contains some of the largest beetles in the collection. Many are elongate with very long antennae. Their larvae take 1-5 years to develop and are mainly found in dead trees or dead parts of trees, some species however develop in living trees and branches (Csoka &Kovacs 1999). The anterior end of the larvae is not broadened and flattened and they are often called round headed borers to distinguish them from the flat headed borers of the buprestid larvae (Borror et al. 1981). As adults many cerambycids feed on flowers.

Aeolesthes holosericea Astinomus aedilis
Cerambyx cerdo Cerambyx cerdo larva in wood
Ceroplesis capensis Compocerus equestris
Dichares ambigenus Embrith strandia

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Hermadius openochrous Hoplocerambyx spinicornis
Megacyllene mellyi Monochamus maculosus
Oxymerus virgatus Phoracantha recurua
Rhagium bifasciatum Rhopalophora iridipennis

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Termisternus stolotes Trichtonotama davidi
Family Cerambycidae: larval damage Batocera numitor

INTRODUCTION  -  THE IMPORTANCE OF BEETLES  -  WOOD BORING & PESTIFEROUS BEETLES

GENERAL FAMILIES / NOVEL BEETLES  -  REFERENCES