USDA UNM MSB Purdue PERC Lucid
Longicorn ID: Tool for Diagnosing Cerambycidae Subfamilies and Tribes
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Phymatodes testaceus

Classification Diagnostic Features of Larvae
  • Larva. No genal setae; ocelli a black spot beneath chitin, not protuberant; last joint maxillary palpi little longer than second, equal to last labial; first and second joints of antennae subequal, little longer than thick; striae of pronotum coarse, irregular, merging into a granulate band behind; ampullae shining, coarsely granulate, these granules flattened into tiny plates; faintly marked with a transverse and two lateral impressions; pleural discs distinct on first, second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth abdominal segments; legs four-jointed; texture shining, granulate. Adapted from Craighead (1923).
Biology and Economic Importance
  • The larva mines chiefly in the bark of oak (Quercus) and is often of economic importance in the tan-bark industries. In thin bark it burrows between the bark and the wood, making a short curved pupal cell in the sapwood. It pupates in the early spring. Adapted from Craighead (1923).
Selected References to Larvae Specimens

idtools.org     Longicorn ID images on Bugwood ITP Node
Longicorn ID last updated 2020  E.H. Nearns, N.P. Lord, S.W. Lingafelter, A. Santos-Silva, K.B. Miller, & J.M. Zaspel