Cerambycinae

Cerambycinae is a subfamily of the longhorn beetle family (Cerambycidae). The subfamily includes over 715 genera, which, in total, consist of some 3,900 species. The subfamily is most widely distributed in the Americas, with 430 species in 130 genera in its neotropical regions. Within the family, the only subfamily of comparable diversity is the Lamiinae.

Cerambycinae
Cerambyx cerdo from the Mátra, Hungary
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Cerambycidae
Subfamily: Cerambycinae
Latreille, 1802

Distribution

Cerambycines are found worldwide, especially widely distributed in the Americas, especially the neotropical regions.[1]

Identification

The major distinguishing factors are the bluntness of the last segment of the maxillary palp, its slanting or near vertical face, the rounded pronotum, and the elytra are often the widest in the middle.[2]

Tribes

gollark: (I'm switching to CBOR so now is a great time for backward incompatible changes)
gollark: Also, if you were to design a broadcast-based messaging system from scratch how would you do it?
gollark: Basically binary JSON.
gollark: Compact Binary Object Representation.
gollark: (Why? Because CBOR is better for everything but support and Hooman readability)

References

  1. "Cerambycinae – Checklist.org". Archived from the original on 2017-12-02. Retrieved 2015-03-29.
  2. Bug Guide
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