- Source: Attelabidae
The Attelabidae is a widespread family of weevils. They are among the primitive weevils, because of their straight antennae, which are inserted near the base of the rostrum. The prothorax is much narrower than the base of the elytra on the abdomen. Attelabidae and the related family Rhynchitidae are known commonly as the leaf-rolling weevils. Rhynchitidae may be treated as subfamily Rhynchitinae of the Attelabidae.
Some members of this family have long necks and may be called giraffe weevils, particularly Trachelophorus giraffa. A few species are minor agricultural pests. The larvae of Rhynchitinae feed in flower buds, fruits, and terminal shoots, or are leaf miners. The subfamily Attelabinae are the true leaf rollers. The female cuts slits into leaves to deposit her eggs, and rolls that part of the leaf in which the larvae will feed.
Taxonomy
= Selected genera
=Apoderus
Attelabus
Cycnotrachelus
Eleuscelus
Euops
Paralleuscelus
Pareleuscelus
Pheleuscelus
Sawadaeuops
Suniops
Trachelophorus
= Tree
=The phylogenetic position of the family within the Curculionoidea based on 18S ribosomal DNA and morphological data can be illustrated in a tree:
References
External links
Bugguide
Korean Attelabidae
Homoeolabus analis on the UF / IFAS Featured Creatures Web site
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kumbang
- Kumbang penggerek
- Cerambycidae
- Kumbang Jerapah
- Kumbang macan
- Hydrophilidae
- Nebria carbonaria
- Kumbang kentang Colorado
- Nebria angustula
- Buprestoidea
- Attelabidae
- Weevil
- Trachelophorus
- Beetle
- Firefly
- Coccinellidae
- Leaf
- Auletobius humeralis
- Apoderus
- Merhynchites