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Photo#407862
False longhorn beetles - Stenotrachelus aeneus (Fabricius) - Stenotrachelus aeneus - male

False longhorn beetles - Stenotrachelus aeneus (Fabricius) - Stenotrachelus aeneus - Male
Chicoutimi, Chicoutimi County, Quebec, Canada
August 23, 2008
Size: 13,5 mm
This unique beetle has been taken at UV light, at dusk, in a forest of Abies and Betula, in Monts-Valin National Park (under a special permit!). It's claws are simple and have membranous lobes underneath. The elytra display a serie of large shallow depressions and therefore look kind of wavy.

Images of this individual: tag all
False longhorn beetles - Stenotrachelus aeneus (Fabricius) - Stenotrachelus aeneus - male False longhorn beetles - Stenotrachelus aeneus (Fabricius) - Stenotrachelus aeneus - male False longhorn beetles - Stenotrachelus aeneus (Fabricius) - Stenotrachelus aeneus - male False longhorn beetles - Stenotrachelus aeneus (Fabricius) - Stenotrachelus aeneus - male

humbly asking for an offline contact
need your help; could you pls drop me a word to vmarfus on gmail? merci d'avance.

wow! permission to weep?
that's how it makes me feel...
can't thank you enough, ColeoClod; made my day.
i only collected the beast once, very late in the season [perhaps early Sep.] in se. Siberia at lights at ~0°C ambient

Moved from False Longhorn Beetles.

 
Cool!
I suppose these are rare..will keep a lookout for them..I'm in southwest BC now and after just over a month I'm already overwhelmed by the rich forest beetle fauna here. Do these frequent flowers &/or foliage? I'm asking this b/c I've collected Cephaloon before from such habitats. Also would be nice to know whether it was collected from a high elevation or lowland area. Great first posts for a newbie!

 
i don't think the anonymus benefactor is a newbie at all
[well, maybe on this site...]
these definitely could not care less about flowers, unlike their Ceph. cousins who are all over the blossoming Umbelliferae [hmm... is Apiaceae the PC name?] in many places. The only S. aeneus i collected was taken at very low elevation, in a major river valley just above the floodplain -- and amidst a developed area, too, perhaps 3 km to the closest woods

 
I knew I had to post this one!
Nice catch isn't it? But the beast made it easy...it came too me! I have to say that I don't know much about this one. It is the only specimen I ever encountered, but I know a friend which collected 5 or six, under the same conditions. That it prefers Ombelliferae over all other plants make sense. The spot I collected it from contains much of it. It was about 23°C that early night, a temperature very unusual for this part of the province. The elevation is around 900 m, well above the plains to the south. Monts-Valin National Park is considered high mountain area.
I have many more contributions I could make

 
can't wait...
wanna see them all! in the meantime, pls check our modest wish list and see what you can do to make us happier than ever :))

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