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Grammoptera exigua
Classification
Diagnostic Features of Larvae
- Larva. Form more depressed than usual; resembling a small Gaurotes. Head depressed, widest at middle, bearing a few long hairs on gena and along frontal sutures; labrum thin, semicircular, longest at middle, widest at base, twice as wide as long; mandible rather short, dull black, apex blunt, dorsal angle not toothed; three small black ocelli; anterior edge of hypostoma not distinct from submentum; maxillary palpi long, basal joints subequal, third longest, cylindrical. Proeusternum shining, bearing a few stiff hairs anteriorly; mesonotum and metanotum dull, finely velvety pubescent; mesosternum and metasternum tuberculate, shining. Legs very long, tarsus attenuate. Ampullae seven, covered with tuberculiform wrinkles (resembles Gaurotes); pleural tubercle bearing two long setae. Spiracles small, sub-orbicular, peritreme thin. Pupa. Form as in adult; bearing scattered stiff hairs on front of head, about disc of pronotum, and on distal portions of femora; mesonotum and metanotum glabrous; abdominal terga bearing short, stiff, spine-like hairs more or less arranged in two transverse rows, longer ones on epipleurum; last segment bearing two slender, straight, acute spines, their under sides parallel. Adapted from Craighead (1923).
Biology and Economic Importance
- The larvae mine between the bark and wood of recently dead Populus. A round flat pupal cell is constructed resembling that of Rhagium. The adults emerged the latter part of May and in June. Adapted from Craighead (1923).
Selected References to Larvae Specimens
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