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bark beetle
(redirected from Scolytinae)

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bark beetle

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Bark beetle (Dendroctonus valens)
(credit: William E. Ferguson)
Any member of the beetle family Scolytidae, many of which severely damage trees. Bark beetles are cylindrical, brown or black, and usually less than 0.25 in. (6 mm) long. A male and females (as many as 60 females with each male) bore into a tree and form a chamber where each female deposits her eggs. The emerging larvae bore away from the chamber, forming a characteristic series of tunnels. Different species attack particular trees, damaging roots, stems, seeds, or fruits. Some species transmit disease (e.g., elm bark beetles carry spores of the fungal Dutch elm disease).



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Checklist of indigenous and adventive bark and ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae: Scolytinae and Platypodinae) of New Zealand and interceptions of exotic species (1952-2000).
Sixty of these species are from the target taxa: Scolytinae (29), Cerambycidae (18), Bostrichidae (11) and Platypodinae (2).
Within North America there is a large body of literature on the Scolytinae (Curculionidae: Coleoptera) and their associates but relatively little work on other saproxylic species or those that occur in later stages of decay (Savely 1939; Howden & Vogt 1951; Hammond et al.
 
 
 
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