A review of the genus Tragidion Audinet-Serville, 1834 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae: Trachyderini)
Author
Swift, Ian
Author
Ray, Ann M.
text
Zootaxa
2008
1892
1
25
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.274503
4589ed63-3240-4b9a-a152-1e1cb2504f3c
1175-5326
274503
Tragidion gracilipes
Linsley
(
Figs 4
B–C, 7B)
Tragidion gracilipes
Linsley, 1940
:136
;
Hovore and Giesbert, 1976
:353
.
Type
locality: Napa County, California.
Material examined
:
10 specimens
, including the
type
at
CASC
.
Diagnosis
. This species is closely related to
T. armatum
and
T. agave
. It can be separated from both species by the narrower metatarsi, in which the first tarsomere is longer than the following two together, and the 2nd tarsomere longer than broad and distinctly more elongate than 3rd, and the tarsal claw is inserted into the 3rd tarsomere distinctly less than half its length; the basal black band is narrow and confined to the humeral margin; the antennal scape, which is enlarged and 2
×
the width of 2nd antennomere at its apex, as well as being more or less equilateral in shape.
Tragidion armatum
and
T. agave
have the more robust tarsi; lack any basal black band; and the scape is subconical, tapering anteriorly.
T. gracilipes
can also be distinguished from
T. armatum
(but not
T. agave
) by the long antennae, which exceed the elytral apices by at least three whole antennomeres.
Distribution
(
Fig. 7
B). From the material examined, this species appears to be endemic to the California Floristic Province, with most specimens from northern and southern California. A specimen of this species from Ensenada, Baja California,
Mexico
(MCZC) represents a new country record.
Ecology
. This species is known to infest
Rhamnus californica
in northern California, however, it has also been reared from fire-killed
Adenostoma fasciculatum
(
Swift 2008
)
. The biology of the larvae is similar to that of
T. annulatum
.