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NOTE: As of 2014, the California Beetle Project page is no longer updated. The original database and list of California beetles in the menu on the left will remain for the time being, but the information contained within is not necessarily current. SBMNH Entomology Curator Matthew L. Gimmel has divided up the function of the original database into two conceptual halves:

  1. The SBMNH Entomology specimen-level database, including all SBMNH beetle specimens included in the CBP database, which is now available (and ever-growing) through the ecdysis portal at https://serv.biokic.asu.edu/ecdysis/

  2. A literature- (and available specimen-)based checklist.
  3. of the Coleoptera of California, which is being revised and re-compiled by Dr. Gimmel, and, as of January 2017, is about 85% complete.




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Funded in part by award DEB0447694 from the National Science Foundation to M. Caterino.




Last updated 01/16/2009

 California Beetle Project > Species Pages > Dinapate wrightii

Classification

Scientific name: Dinapate wrightii Horn
Common name: The Giant Palm Borer
    Order Coleoptera
    Superfamily Bostrichoidea
    Family Bostrichidae

Images (click to enlarge)

What it looks like: The Giant Palm Borer is very large (3-5cm), cylindrical and dark brown. The wing covers have weakly raised ridges with many punctures between, and have projecting points near the tail end. The head points downward from the hood-like prothorax. The beetle is hairless above, but has dense golden hairs beneath.

Where you'll find it: This species occurs in scattered localities throughout the Colorado desert, always in isolated canyons where its host palms grow.

Natural History: Dinapate wrightii is a specialist borer in the California Fan Palm, Washingtonia filifera. Adults emerge in midsummer, and are active mainly at night. Females chew tunnels into the trunk at leaf bases. Here males find and mate with them, and eggs are soon laid. Larvae bore through the trunks, requiring several years to develop. When full-grown they pupate near the surface of the trunks; upon emergence, the adults chew their way to freedom.

This page was written by Michael Caterino, project PI




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