North American Xyleborini north of Mexico: a review and key to genera and species (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Scolytinae)
Author
Gomez, Demian F.
Author
Rabaglia, Robert J.
Author
Fairbanks, Katherine E. O.
Author
Hulcr, Jiri
text
ZooKeys
2018
768
19
68
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.768.24697
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.768.24697
1313-2970-768-19
9160854B540D402DB6765AFF0BCE899B
Anisandrus dispar (Fabricius, 1792)
Fig. 5
Apate dispar
Fabricius, 1792.
Bostrichus brevis
Panzer, 1793. Synonymy Eichhoff 1878.
Bostrichus thoracicus
Panzer, 1793. Synonymy Hagedorn 1910.
Scolytus pyri
Peck, 1817. Synonymy Hubbard 1897.
Bostrichus tachygraphus
Sahlberg, 1834. Synonymy Eichhoff 1878.
Bostrichus ratzeburgi
Kolenati, 1846. Synonymy Ferrari 1867.
Anisandrus aequalis
Reitter, 1913. Synonymy Mandelshtam 2001.
Anisandrus swainei
Drake, 1921. Synonymy Wood 1957.
Xyleborus dispar rugulosus
Eggers 1922.
Xyleborus cerasi
Eggers, 1937. Synonymy Schedl 1964.
Xyleborus khinganensis
Murayama, 1943. Synonymy Kní
zek
2011.
Type material.
Syntypes female; Germaniae; UZMC.
Distribution.
Asia; Europe; North America (introduced): Canada: British Columbia, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario; United States: California, District of Columbia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia.
Notes.
Representing the first non-native scolytine reported in North America (
Rabaglia et al. 2006
),
Anisandrus dispar
was likely unintentionally introduced before 1817 (
Wood 1977
). Found across North America from southern Canada through northern United States. Similar to
A. maiche
but larger.