Xylosandrus subsimilis


  Xylosandrus subsimilis  lateral; R.K. Osborn

Xylosandrus subsimilis lateral; R.K. Osborn


  Xylosandrus subsimilis  dorsal; R.K. Osborn

Xylosandrus subsimilis dorsal; R.K. Osborn


  Xylosandrus subsimilis  declivity; R.K. Osborn

Xylosandrus subsimilis declivity; R.K. Osborn


  Xylosandrus subsimilis  frontal; R.K. Osborn

Xylosandrus subsimilis frontal; R.K. Osborn


Taxonomic history

Xyleborus subsimilis Eggers, 1930: 186.

Xylosandrus subsimilis (Eggers): Wood and Bright, 1992: 800.

Diagnosis

2.5−2.9 mm long (mean = 2.64 mm; n = 5); 1.79−2.0 times as long as wide. This species can be distinguished by its moderate size; elytralelytral:
'pertaining to the elytra
discdisc:
the flat central upper surface of any body part (e.g. pronotum and elytra)
flat, longer than declivitydeclivity:
downward slope of either the pronotum or elytra
; declivitaldeclivital:
pertaining to the elytral declivity
face steep, abruptly separated from discdisc:
the flat central upper surface of any body part (e.g. pronotum and elytra)
; elytraelytron:
' the two sclerotized forewings of beetles that protect and cover the flight wings
appearing truncate; posterolateralposterolateral:
'relating to end of the side part/portion
margins of elytraelytron:
' the two sclerotized forewings of beetles that protect and cover the flight wings
carinate to interstriaeinterstria:
'longitudinal spaces along the elytra between the striae, which is not as<br /> impressed and bear smaller punctures.
7; declivitaldeclivital:
pertaining to the elytral declivity
face with four apparent granulategranulate:
'pertaining to a coarse, grainy surface texture'
striae (striae 5 short, converging with striaestria:
punctures in rows, which may or may not be impressed to make grooves
4 forming a loop); declivitaldeclivital:
pertaining to the elytral declivity
face flattened, depressed below declivitial margins; declivitaldeclivital:
pertaining to the elytral declivity
striae and interstriaeinterstria:
'longitudinal spaces along the elytra between the striae, which is not as<br /> impressed and bear smaller punctures.
setose, setaeseta:
small hair-like or scale-like structure
recumbentrecumbent:
'pertaining to setae that are flat against the cuticle
, thick, less than ½ width of an interstriainterstria:
'longitudinal spaces along the elytra between the striae, which is not as<br /> impressed and bear smaller punctures.
; interstriaeinterstria:
'longitudinal spaces along the elytra between the striae, which is not as<br /> impressed and bear smaller punctures.
granulategranulate:
'pertaining to a coarse, grainy surface texture'
, granulesgranule:
'a small rounded protuberance, like grains of sand
multiseriate, confusedconfused:
of markings, having indefinite outlines or running together as lines or spots without definite pattern; usually referring to punctures
strial granulesgranule:
'a small rounded protuberance, like grains of sand
at least two times larger than those of interstriae; pronotumpronotum:
'the dorsal surface of the thorax
longer than wide, from dorsaldorsal:
'of or relating to the upper surface; opposite of ventral
view conical frontally (type 6) and laterallateral:
'pertaining to the side
view taller (type 2), summitsummit:
highest point, used for pronotum and elytra, denotes the peak between pronotal frontal slope and disc, and between elytral disc and declivity
at basalbase:
point or edge closest to the body; opposite of apex
quarter, basalbase:
point or edge closest to the body; opposite of apex
quarter shagreenedshagreened:
covered with a closely-set roughness, like shark skin'
, dull, densely punctatepunctate:
'set with fine impressed points, appearing as pin pricks
; and broad, dense mycangial tuftmycangial tuft:
'tuft of setae that denotes the mycangia exterior opening
on the pronotalpronotal:
'pertaining to the pronotum
basebase:
point or edge closest to the body; opposite of apex
.

May be confused with

Xylosandrus brevis, X. jaintianus, and X. subsimiliformis

Distribution

China (Hainan, Yunnan), India (Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya, West Bengal), Laos, Myanmar, Thailand

Host plants

recorded from five different families (Maiti and Saha 2004Maiti and Saha 2004:
Maiti PK, Saha N. 2004. Fauna of India and the adjacent countries. Scolytidae: Coleoptera (bark and ambrosia beetles). Vol. 1. Part 1. Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata, 268 pp.
, Dole and Cognato 2010Dole and Cognato 2010:
Dole SA, Cognato AI, 2010. Revision of Xylosandrus Reitter (Curculionidae: Scolytinae). Proceedings of the California of Science 61: 451-545.
) and presumably polyphagous (Smith et al. 2020bSmith et al. 2020b:
Smith SM, Beaver RA, and Cognato AI. 2020b. A monograph of the Xyleborini (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Scolytinae) of the Indochinese Peninsula (except Malaysia) and China. ZooKeys 983: 1-442. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.983.52630
)

DNA data

Sequences available for CAD.

CAD: MN620359