[Photo © M.Hoskovec]
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According to Rejzek and Rébl [❖] the preferred host of this species in Central Europe is field maple (Acer campestre).
Thicker branches and trunks are usually attacked. Larvae feed subcortically and later in sapwood creating a very characteristic frass pattern filled with fine sawdust. When entering the wood the larvae
never block the entrance holes. They secure the pupal cells by a wad of frass deeper in the wood. The beetles can occasionally be found on flowers but they
probably gather on them during the night and stay there a substantial part of the next day, analogous to their close relative Leioderes tuerki, a typical nocturnal species.
Leioderes tuerki is not active before dusk and during the night it flies around cordwood and comes to flowering plants, shrubs and trees. During the next morning it can for example be
found sitting on flowering hawthorn, but it disappears before noon. Most of the beetles spend the day sitting on leaves of the host plants (Juglans regia and others in case of Leioderes tuerki).
Body length: | 9 - 15 mm |
Life cycle: | 1 - 2 years |
Adults in: | May - June |
Host plant: | polyphagous in deciduous trees (Acer, Ulmus, Quercus) |
Distribution: | Albania, Austria, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czechia, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine |
The depicted beetles were reared from larvae collected in dead field maple (Acer camperstre) in Křivoklátsko Protected Landscape Area
(Central Bohemia, Czechia).
Collected by Miroslav Polcar and M.Hoskovec
[❖]
Rejzek M. and Rébl K.:
Cerambycidae of Křivoklátsko Biosphere Reserve (Central Bohemia) (Insecta: Coleoptera).
Mitteilungen des Internationalen Entomologischen Vereins e. V., Frankfurt a. Main, Supplement VI: 1–69, 1999.
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