Return to Texas Entomology - Compiled by Mike Quinn
The cerambycid genus Tetraopes is the most diverse of the New World milkweed herbivores (Farrell 2001).
Twenty-four species of Tetraopes
range from
Guatemala to Canada
Fifteen species occur in the United States
Ten species occur in Texas
Photos of Tetraopes specimens curated in the TAMUIC
Photos of types and other specimens per Cerambycidae Catalog:
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.
Betz, R.F., W.R. Rommel & J.J. Dichtl. 2000. Insect herbivores of 12 milkweed (Asclepias) species. Pp. 7-19, In: C. Warwick (ed.). Proceedings of the Fifteenth North American Prairie Conference, Natural Areas Association, Bend, OR.
Bezark
L.G., and M.A. Monnι. 2013. Checklist of the Oxypeltidae, Vesperidae,
Disteniidae and Cerambycidae (Coleoptera) of the Western Hemisphere.
470 pp.
Chemsak, J.A. 1963. Taxonomy and bionomics of the genus Tetraopes (Cerambycidae: Coleoptera). University of California Publications in Entomology 30(1): 1-90.
Chemsak, J.A., & F.A. Noguera. 2003. New Species of the Genus Tetraopes Schoenherr (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). Pan-Pacific Entomologist 79: 237-244. (Abstract)
Dailey, P.J., R.C. Graves & J.M. Kingsolver. 1978. Survey of Coleoptera collected on the common milkweed, Asclepias syriaca, at one site in Ohio. The Coleopterists Bulletin, 32(3): 223229.
Farrell, B.D. 1991. Phylogenetics of insect/plant interactions: Tetraopes and Asclepias. Ph.D. Dissertation. University of Maryland, College Park.
Farrell, B.D. 2001. Evolutionary assembly of the milkweed fauna: Cytochrome oxidase I and the age of Tetraopes beetles. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 18(3): 467478.
Farrell, B.D. & C. Mitter. 1998. The
timing of insect/plant diversification: Might Tetraopes
(Coleoptera:
Cerambycidae) and Asclepias (Asclepiadaceae) have co-evolved?
Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 63: 553577.
Hartman, F.A. 1977. The ecology and coevolution of common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca, Asclepiadacieae) and milkweed beetles (Tetraopes tetraophthalmus, Cerambycidae). Ph.D. Thesis, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Hovore, F.T., R.L. Penrose & R.W. Neck. 1987. The Cerambycidae, or longhorned beetles, of southern Texas: a faunal survey (Coleoptera). Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences, 44(13): 283-334, 20 figs.
Lawrence, W.S. 1982. Sexual dimorphism in between and within patch movements of a monophagous insect: Tetraopes (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). Oecologia 53: 245-250.
Lingafelter, S.W. 2007. Illustrated key to the longhorned woodboring beetles of the eastern United States. Special Publication No. 3. Coleopterists Society Miscellaneous Publication. 206 pp.
Lingafelter, S.W. & N.V. Horner. 1993. The Cerambycidae of north-central Texas. The Coleopterists Bulletin, 47(2): 159-191.
Linsley E.G. & J.A. Chemsak. 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.
MacRae, T.C. 1993. Annotated checklist of the longhorned beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae and Disteniidae) occurring in Missouri. Insecta Mundi 7(4): 223252.
MacRae, T.C. & M.E. Rice 2007. Biological and distributional observations on North American Cerambycidae (Coleoptera). Coleopterists Bulletin 61(2): 227-263.
Nishio, S., Blum, M.S., Takahashi, S. 1983. Intraplant distribution of cardenolides in Asclepias humistrata (Asclepiadaceae), with additional notes on their fates in Tetraopes melanurus (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) and Rhyssomatus lineaticollis (Coleoptera: Curculionidae). Memoirs of the College of Agriculture, Kyoto University 122: 43-52.
Price, P.W. & M.F. Willson. 1976. Some consequences for a parasitic herbivore, the milkweed longhorn beetle, Tetraopes tetrophthalmus, of a host-plant shift from Asclepias syriaca to A. verticillata. Oecologia 25: 331340.
Price, P.W. & M.F. Willson. 1979. Abundance of herbivores on six
milkweed species in Illinois. American Midland Naturalist 101: 7686.
Rice, M.E., R.H. Turnbow & R.T. Hovore. 1985. Biological and distributional observations on Cerambycidae from the southwestern United States (Coleoptera). Coleopterists Bulletin 39: 18-24.
Rice, M.R. 1988. Natural history observations on Tetraopes and other Cerambycidae (Coleoptera) from the Great Plains ecosystem. Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 61: 412419.Schiefer, T.L. 1998. Disjunct distribution of Cerambycidae
(Coleoptera) in the black belt prairie and Jackson prairie in
Mississippi and Alabama. Coleopterists Bulletin 52(3): 278-284.
Skillman, F.W., Jr. 2007. A new species of Tetraopes Schoenherr (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). Insecta Mundi 0008: 1-3.
Yanega, D. 1996. Field guide to northeastern longhorn beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). Illinois Natural History Survey, Champaign, 6:1-184.
26 May 2017 © Mike Quinn / Texas Entomology / Texas Beetle Resources