CZ EN
SEARCH  

Taxon profile

species

Ceresium unicolor (Fabricius, 1787)

kingdom Animalia - animals »  phylum Arthropoda - arthropods »  class Insecta - insects »  order Coleoptera - beetles »  family Cerambycidae - longhorn beetles »  genus Ceresium

Scientific synonyms

Saperda unicolor Fabricius, 1787 o
Hesperophanes guttaticolle Fairmaire, 1850
Callidium (Hesperophanes) lifuanum Montrouzier, 1861
Diatomocephala lifuana (Montrouzier, 1861)
Ceresium lifuanum (Montrouzier, 1861)
Cerambyx maculaticollis Blanchard, 1853
Ceresium maculaticolle (Blanchard, 1853)
Ceresium paluense Matsushita, 1933
Arhopalus ambiguus Newman, 1842 (misidentification) M
Ceresium flavipes (Fabricius) Auct. (misidentification) M

Images

Ceresium unicolor

female

Author: Stanislav Krejčík

Ceresium unicolor

female

Author: Stanislav Krejčík

Ceresium unicolor

female

Author: Stanislav Krejčík

Ceresium unicolor

female

Author: Stanislav Krejčík

Ceresium unicolor

Author: Charles Émile Blanchard

Ceresium unicolor

Author: Lebrun

Taxon in country check-lists*

* List of countries might not be complete

CZ   EN  

Description

Typical locality: New Amsterdam

Intertaxon relationships

food: Casuarina equisetifolia L. - Australian Pine, Sophora chrysophylla (Salisb.) Seem. - Mamani, Talipariti tiliaceum (L.) Fryxell - Sea Hibiscus, Myoporum sandwicense (A. DC.) A. Gray - Naio, Metrosideros polymorpha Gaud. - 'ohi'a Lehua, ...

Similar species

Ceresium flavipes (Fabricius, 1792)
Ceresium guttaticolle (Fairmaire, 1850)

Included taxa

Number of records: 3

subspecies Ceresium unicolor marshallum Gressitt, 1956
subspecies Ceresium unicolor pseudounicolor Kusama & Komiya, 1972
subspecies Ceresium unicolor unicolor (Fabricius, 1787)

Links and literature


Contributions to BioLib

Help us to expand this encyclopedia! If you are logged in, you can add new subtaxa, vernacular and scientific names, texts, images or intertaxon relationships for this taxon.

Names (not confirmed) - 1
Comments


Explanations

o original combination

M taxon was incorrectly identified in certain scientific works