Pale old oak night buck
Pale old oak night buck | ||||||||||||
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Pale old oak night buck |
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Systematics | ||||||||||||
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Scientific name | ||||||||||||
Trichoferus pallidus | ||||||||||||
( Olivier , 1790) |
The bleach-old oaks night Bock ( Trichoferus pallidus ) is a threatened with extinction beetles from the family of longhorn beetles (Cerambycidae).
features
The body length of the beetle is 10 to 20 millimeters. The first part of the antennae reaches the front edge of the pronotum, the eyes are edged and roughly faceted. The third link in the antennae is simple. The pronotum is narrower than the wings , rounded on the sides and often structured with dorsal protrusions on top. The upper wings run parallel and are usually provided with a double puncture. The tarsi are bebürstet down and can fine longitudinal groove own. The beetles are reddish yellow in color and dense at the bottom, but pale yellow haired at the top. Behind the middle the elytra bear a brownish, sharply delimited drawing that is faded towards the back. This is lined with a longer and thicker hair to the front. The suture of the wing cover is also denser and lighter colored. The pronotum has an elongated bulge in front of the base.
distribution and habitat
The pale old oak night buck occurs in Central and Western Europe, in the Crimea and in the North Caucasus. The species' habitat is very old (dying) oaks. It is usually found on trees that are also infested by the great oak billy ( Cerambyx cerdo ) or nearby.
Trichoferus pallidus is considered an indicator of a species-rich beetle community and primeval forest relic species .
biology
It feeds almost monophag on old oaks. It is nocturnal, seeks light and is said to love warmth. The life cycle lasts two to three years.
Existence and endangerment
Trichoferus pallidus is threatened with extinction in Germany (Red List, Category 1). In Germany there are currently sites in Baden-Württemberg, Hesse, Rhineland-Palatinate and Saxony-Anhalt. The beetle was first found in 2004 in the forest near Lampertheim (South Hesse). Individual specimens were also seen there in 2008 and 2009.
Synonyms and systematics
As Erstbeschreiber had Guillaume-Antoine Olivier (1756-1814) these beetles in 1790 with the binomial name Callidium pallidum provided. Today it belongs to the genus Trichoferus Wollaston, 1854.
Further synonyms are known from the literature:
- Hesperophanes pallidus
- Callidium pallidus
- Hesperoferus pallidus
Individual evidence
- ^ Longhorn Beetles of the West Palaearctic Region. Michal Hoskovec, Martin Tejzek, accessed August 12, 2010 .
- ↑ Edmund Reitter : Fauna Germanica - The beetles of the German Empire . 5 volumes, Stuttgart KG Lutz 1908 - 1916. In: Digital Library . tape 134 . Directmedia Publishing, Berlin 2006, ISBN 3-89853-534-7 , p. 46 .
- ↑ Coleopterologe.de - Beetles on the WWW. Oliver Nolte, accessed August 12, 2010 .
- ↑ Eckhard Jedicke: Altholzinseln ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ a b The beetle fauna of Germany - Remarkable beetle finds from Germany. Christoph Benisch, accessed on August 12, 2010 .
- ↑ a b Federal Agency for Nature Conservation (Ed.): Red List of Endangered Animals in Germany . Landwirtschaftsverlag, Münster 1998, ISBN 3-89624-110-9 , p. 215 .
- ↑ Guillaume-A. Olivier : Encyclopédie méthodique . Histoire Naturelle. Insectes . tape 5 . Panckoucke, Paris 1790, p. 256 . (Initial description)
- ^ Trichoferus pallidus in Fauna Europaea
literature
- Ulrich Bense: Longhorn beetles. Illustrated key to the Cerambycidae and Vesperidae of Europe. Margraf Verlag, Weikersheim 1995, ISBN 978-3823611547
- Edmund Reitter : Fauna Germanica - The beetles of the German Empire. Volume 4, KG Lutz, Stuttgart 1912
- Image of a larva under the bark of a dead oak