Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi (original) (raw)

Pogonocherus (Pogonocherus) perroudi Mulsant, 1839
ssp. perroudi Mulsant, 1839

Subfamilia: LAMIINAE / Tribus: POGONOCHERINI


Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi

[Photo © David Navrátil, click on the picture for 4K resolution]


Pogonocherus perroudi, a broadly distributed Mediterranenan species, has been described from Bordeaux environs (France) by Étienne Mulsant in 1839 [✮]. Larvae develop under the bark of thinner branches, the tops of weakened or uprooted trees, in the lower naturally dying branches of living pine trees.

Body length: 4 - 8 mm
Life cycle: 1 - 2 years
Adults in: April - August
Host plant: dying pine (Pinus) branches (P. halepensis, P. nigra, P. pinaster, P. salzmanni)
Distribution: Albania, Algeria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Corsica, Croatia, Cyprus, Egypt, France, Greece, Israel, Italy, Morocco, Sardinia, Sicily, Spain, Tunisia, Turkey

The mounted specimebs were reared from a larvae found in a dead Austrian pine (Pinus nigra) twigs collected 3 km NW of Novi Vinodolski (166 m a.s.l., Primorje-Gorski kotar county, Croatia) on May 23, 2014. The depicted living beetles were reared from a larvae found in a dead pine (Pinus sp.) twigs collected in Samos island (Greece) and in Croatia.

Collected by David Navrátil, Roman Rejzek and Petr Jelínek


[✮]
Mulsant E.:
Histoire Naturelle des Coléoptères de France. Longicornes.
Paris, Maison: vii-xii + 304pp, 1839. [download pdf icon]

Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi
Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi
Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi
Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi
Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi
Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi
[Photo © Daniel Rydzi]


Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi
Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi
Pogonocherus perroudi perroudi
[Photo © Petr Jelínek]


Subfamilia Lamiinae Latreille, 1825
Tribus Pogonocherini Mulsant, 1839
Genus Pogonocherus Dejean, 1821
Subgenus Pogonocherus Dejean, 1821
Species Pogonocherus (Pogonocherus) perroudi Mulsant, 1839
Subspecies Pogonocherus (Pogonocherus) perroudi perroudi Mulsant, 1839