Return to Texas Entomology - Compiled by Mike Quinn
County Record Data from E.G. Riley, Dec. 2005
Range: Eastern North America, to northeast Texas (Morris County).
Adult Activity: May-August.
Larval Hosts:
Dead and dying Virginia creeper, grape, poison ivy (Yanega, 1996). It sometimes heavily infests Virginia Creeper, a few dead branches have been known to yield dozens of specimens (Dan Heffern. pers. comm.)
VITACEAE Parthenocissus quinquefolia - Univ. Texas
Plant Profile for Parthenocissus quinquefolia (Virginia creeper) - USDA
Similar Species: There are 15 species of Saperda, most occur in eastern North America (Monné & Hovore, 2002).
Texas Taxa:
Saperda calcarata Say
Saperda cretata Newman
Saperda lateralis Fabricius
Saperda puncticollis Say
Saperda tridentata Olivier
Etymology: Woodbine is another name for Virginia Creeper
Biography: Thomas Say (1787 – 1834) - Wikipedia
Arnett, R.H., Jr., M.C. Thomas, P.E. Skelley & J.H. Frank. (editors). 2002. American Beetles, Volume II: Polyphaga: Scarabaeoidea through Curculionoidea. CRC Press. 861 pp.
Linsley E.G. & Chemsak J.A. 1995. Cerambycidae of North America. Part VII, No. 2. Taxonomy and Classification of the Subfamily Lamiinae, Tribes Acanthocinini through Hemilophini. University of California publications in Entomology, 114: 1-292.
Monné, M.A. & F.T. Hovore. 2005. Electronic Checklist of the Cerambycidae of the Western Hemisphere. 393 pp.
Solomon, J.D. 1995. Guide to Insect Borers in North American Broadleaf Trees and Shrubs. USDA Forest Service Agriculture Handbook 706, Washington, DC.
Yanega, D. 1996. Field guide to northeastern longhorn beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). Illinois Natural History Survey, Champaign, 6:1-184.
21 Apr 2007 © Mike Quinn / mike.quinn@tpwd.state.tx.us / Texas Entomology / Texas Beetle Information