[= Cerambyx (Callidium) portugallus Gmelin, 1790]
Subfamilia: CERAMBYCINAE / Tribus: CLYTINI
[Photo © David Navrátil, click on the picture for 4K resolution]
Chlorophorus trifasciatus, a species widely distributed in whole Mediterranean region, has been described from Portugal as Callidium trifasciatum by Johann Christian Fabricius in 1781 [▽]. Ch. trifasciatus, a typical inhabitant of uncultivated and ruderal areas, forest-steppes, generally xerothermic localities of rather steppe character, belongs among the Clytini tribe taxa not developing in the above-ground parts of woody plants but in the roots of legumes (Fabaceae).
Body length: 6 - 12 mm Life cycle: 2 years Adults in: May - July Host plant: larvae in roots of Fabaceae (Ononis, Dorycnium) Distribution: S and SE Europe, North Africa, Turkey, Near East
The mounted specimens were collected in Jakov Polje village environs (N45°05′31″ E14°52′22″; 400 m a.s.l., Novi Vinodolski, Primorje-Gorski Kotar county, Country).The living beetles were collected on Achillea in Argelès-sur-Mer environs (Pyrénées-Orientales department, Languedoc-Roussillon-Midi-Pyrénées, France) on June 20, 2018 and in Somosierra environs (Sierra de Guadarrama, Sierra Norte county, Community of Madrid, Spain) on June 14, 2021.
Collected by David Navrátil and Daniel Rydzi
[▽]
Fabricius J.Ch.:
Species insectorum exhibentes eorum differentias specificas, synonyma auctorum, loca natalia, metamorphosin adiectis observationibus, descriptionibus.
Hamburgi et Kilonii: Carol Ernest Bohnii 1: iii-viii + 552pp, 1781. [download ]Trócoli S.:
Actualización del catálogo de Longicornios de Marruecos Actualisation du catalogue des Longicornes du Maroc (Parte III / Partie III : Cerambycidae, Cerambycinae).
Revue de l'Association Roussillonnaise d'Entomologie (R.A.R.E.) 8 (3): 143-185, 2019 [download ]
[Photo © Daniel Rydzi]
Subfamilia | Cerambycinae Latreille, 1802 |
Tribus | Clytini Mulsant, 1839 |
Genus | Chlorophorus Chevrolat, 1863 |
Species | Chlorophorus varius (O.F.Müller, 1766) |
Subspecies | Chlorophorus trifasciatus (Fabricius, 1781) |