Taxonomic, distributional and biological study of the genus Agrilus (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Part II
Author
Jendek, Eduard
Author
Nakládal, Oto
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-02-11
4554
2
401
459
journal article
27569
10.11646/zootaxa.4554.2.5
e82de321-5da8-45a5-8404-f42ef44753aa
1175-5326
2623782
C34AC0B9-7D42-456A-9FC3-65A336FCFFED
Agrilus suvorovi
Obenberger, 1935
(
Figs 8
A–8F)
Examined specimens.
IRAN
.
Mazandaran
.
Sari—Pahneh Kola
;
36°27'14"N
,
053°03'06"E
; 6-2011; alt.
218 m
;
1 ♂
(EJCB).
RUSSIA
.
Primorye.
30–35km
SE Ussurysk
,
Kaymanovka
vill.;
43°37'53"N
,
132°13'42"E
; 6-2008; 1 (
EJCB
)
.
Rostov
.
Razdorskaya
;
47°32'25"N
,
040°38'48"E
; 6, 7-2008; 1 (
MKCY
)
//
Rostov
on
Don
;
47°14'21"N
,
039°41'08"E
; 6-2008; 1 (
MKCY
)
.
SLOVAKIA
.
Bratislava-Kadnárova
;
48°11'57"N
,
017°08'25"E
; 6-2018; Larval host:
Populus alba
var.
pyramidalis
Bunge
; 10 (
EJCB
)
//
Bratislava-Lieskova
cesta;
48°06'44"N
,
017°12'08"E
; 6- 2018; Larval host:
Populus nigra
L.; 10 (
EJCB
)
.
Host plant cited
. Larval:
Populus alba
var.
pyramidalis
;
Populus nigra
.
Biological remarks
. The larva develops together with
A. ater
in
Populus
and
Salix
. Generally,
Agrilus
suvorovi
prefers parts with a thinner bark (branches) because the pupal chamber is located in the wood (
Fig. 8D
) and therefore exit wholes are visible even when the bark is removed, unlike
A. ater
which pupal chamber is in the thick bark (
Fig. 1C
).