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Species Stenelytrana emarginata

 
 
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Illustrated revision of the Cerambycidae of North America. Vol. II. Lepturinae
By Chemsak J.A.
Wolfsgarden Books, Chino, CA, xv+446 pp., 27 pls., 2005

Flower records for anthophilous Cerambycidae in a southwestern Michigan woodland.
By Gosling, D.C.L.
Great Lakes Entomologist 17(2): 79–82., 1984
Full PDF - see pgs 79-82

Gosling, D.C.L. 1984. Flower records for anthophilous Cerambycidae in a southwestern Michigan woodland. Great Lakes Entomologist 17(2): 79–82.

ABSTRACT
Flower records are listed for 33 species of anthophilous Cerambycidae based on a six-year study in an 80-ha woodland in southwestern Michigan.

DISCUSSION
The cerambycids in this list are from the Lepturinae and a few tribes of Cerambycinae; no other subfamilies are represented. The three species of Tetraopes found in the study area do occasionally appear on the flowers of their host plants, Asclepias syriaca L.

Cerambycidae of North America. Part VI, No. 1. Taxonomy and classification of the subfamily Lepturinae
By Linsley E.G., Chemsak J. A.
University of California Publications in Entomology 69: 1-138, 1972

Cerambycidae of North America. Part VI, No. 2. Taxonomy and classification of the subfamily Lepturinae.
By E. Gorton Linsley and John A. Chemsak. 1976.
University of California Press, Berkeley, 1976
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Linsley, E.G. & J.A. Chemsak. 1976. Cerambycidae of North America. Part VI, No. 2. Taxonomy and classification of the subfamily Lepturinae. Univ. Calif. Publs Ent., Berkeley, 80: ix + 186 pp., 50 figs.

Catalogue of the Cerambycidae (Col.) of Canada and United States of America, Parts I‒IV
By Monné M.A., Nearns E.H.
Available from https://cerambycids.com/catalog/, 2023

The longhorn beetles (Col.: Cerambycidae) of Kentucky with notes on larval hosts, adult nectar use, and semiochemical attraction
By Chapman E.G., Richards A.B., Dupuis J.R.
Zootaxa 5229: 1–89, 2022

Notes on some longicorns from subtropical Texas (Coleop.: Cerambycidae)
By Linsley, E.G. & J.O. Martin.
Entomological News, 44(7): 178-183., 1933
Full Text - BHL

Linsley, E.G. & J.O. Martin. 1933. Notes on some longicorns from subtropical Texas (Coleop.: Cerambycidae). Entomological News, 44(7): 178-183.

Since the subtropical insect fauna of Brownsville, Texas, was first made famous by Townsend, and later by Wickbam, Schwarz, and Schaeffer, this interesting region has been sought by many collectors. During recent years the development of good roads and improved methods of transportation have eliminated the necessity for spending long periods of time in travelling to and from Southern Texas.

Notes on the ecology and distribution of western Cerambycidae (Coleoptera).
By Hovore, F.T. & E.F. Giesbert.
The Coleopterists Bulletin, 30(4): 349-360., 1976
JSTOR

Hovore, F.T. & E.F. Giesbert. (1976) Notes on the Ecology and Distribution of Western Cerambycidae (Coleoptera). The Coleopterists Bulletin, 30(4): 349-360.

Abstract

Previously unrecorded larval hosts, adult habits, and distributional data are presented for 63 species of Cerambycidae from western North America. An unusual population of Tragidion coquus (Linnaeus) is discussed and compared to Tragidion annulatum LeConte and Tragidion auripenne Casey. The attraction of Tragidion peninsulare californicum Linsley to fire is recorded.

 
 
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