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The adult cottonwood borer is a large longhorn beetle with a black-and-white coloration and black antennae as long or longer than the body. [5] The white portions are due to microscopic masses of hair. [6] The larvae have legless, cylindrical, creamy-white bodies with a brown-to-black head and grow up to 38 millimetres (1.5 in) long.
Cacosceles newmannii - Southern African longhorn beetle that is a sugarcane pest; Desmocerus californicus dimorphus – valley elderberry longhorn beetle, a threatened subspecies from California; Moneilema – cactus longhorn beetles, which are flightless; Onychocerus albitarsis – the only known beetle with a venomous sting
Forest Disturbance Processes - Asian Longhorned Beetle. Archived 2019-07-08 at the Wayback Machine US Forest Service: Northern Research Station; Species Profile- Asian long-horned beetle (Anoplophora glabripennis), National Invasive Species Information Center, United States National Agricultural Library. Lists general information and resources ...
From a distance, M. robiniae can easily be mistaken for a wasp or bee, due to its black and yellow striped pattern. It can also be mistaken for two closely related species: M. caryae and M. decora. The adult beetle can be 11 to 28 mm (0.43 to 1.10 in) long, and it has a W-shaped third stripe on the elytra. The antennae of both sexes are dark ...
Leptura quadrifasciata, the four-banded longhorn beetle, is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. [1] It was described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. [2] Adult beetles are 11–20 mm long, black with four more or less continuous transverse yellow bands.
Adult beetles are 8–30 mm long reddish-brown to black, while males are generally smaller and lighter in colour. [3] [4] The body is elongated and oval, typical for longhorn beetles. The head angles forward, showing most of the mouth parts. The thread-like antennae are half to three-quarters of the body length, longer in males.
Moneilema, or cactus longhorn beetles are a genus of large, flightless, black beetles found in North American deserts of the western United States and northern Mexico. M. gigas is native to the Sonoran Desert at elevations below 4900 feet (1500m). [ 1 ]
Baryssinus huedepohli is a species of longhorn beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Monné & Martins in 1976. [1] Baryssinus huedepohli is a small to medium-sized beetle, ranging in length from 11 to 17 mm. It is black or brown in color, with white or yellow markings on the head, pronotum, and elytra.