- Source: Prosopocera lactator
Prosopocera lactator, the Turquoise Longhorn, is a species of flat-faced longhorn beetles in the subfamily Lamiinae.
Subspecies
Prosopocera lactator lactator (Fabricius, 1801)
Prosopocera lactator meridionalis Jordan, 1903
Prosopocera lactator poggei Harold, 1878
Description
Prosopocera lactator can reach a length of about 23–37 millimetres (0.91–1.46 in). The colors and markings of these longhorn beetles are quite variable. Usually they are brown-colored, with large light greenish or whitish patches on the elytra and pronotum and turquoise leg markings. The coloration of said greenish-white patches derives from the orientation of three-dimensional photonic-crystal grains present in the scales. These beetles feed exclusively on Cashew (Anacardium occidentale). Females lay their eggs in the stems and branches of the Buffalo Thorn (Ziziphus mucronata).
Distribution
This species can be found in Democratic Republic of the Congo, Guinea, Malawi, Mozambique, Senegal, Somalia, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda.
References
Biolib
Worldwide Cerambycoidea Photo Gallery
Photographs from South Africa
Jean-Franc¸ois Colomer, Priscilla Simonis, Annick Bay, Peter Cloetens, Heikki Suhonen, Marie Rassart, Cedric Vandenbem and Jean Pol Vigneron Photonic polycrystal in the greenish-white scales of the African longhorn beetle Prosopocera lactator
Living Space