Dendroctonus frontalis

Dendroctonus frontalis, the southern pine beetle[1], is a species of bark beetle native to the forests of southern United States, Mexico and Central America.[2] It has a hard reddish brown to black exoskeleton and measures approximately 3 mm (0.12 in), about the size of a grain of rice. It is short-legged, the front of the males head is notched, the female possesses a wide elevated transverse ridge,[3] and the hind abdomen of both is round.[4]

Dendroctonus frontalis
Scientific classification
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D. frontalis
Binomial name
Dendroctonus frontalis
Zimmermann, 1868
Synonyms

Dendroctonus arizonicus

Tree infestations

Dendroctonus frontalis inhabits several Pinus species. Host trees in the United States include primarily P. taeda, P. echinata, P. elliottii, P. virginiana, P. rigida, P. palustris, P. serotina, P. pungens and P. strobes, P. ponderosa, P. engelmannii and P. leiophylla.[4] Host trees in Central America include P. caribaea, P. engelmannii, P. leiophylla, P. maximinoi and P. oocarpa.[4] In the south-eastern United States it is considered one of the most important causes of economic loss in forestry.[5] About $900 million worth of damage was caused by this species from 1960 to 1990 in the southern United States.[6]

gollark: I really should have remote piloting by neural interface for this sort of thing. Not because I could fix it, but to get out of reach of murderers.
gollark: Look, I'm not at a computronic matrix right now, I'll fix it in ~10 mins.
gollark: Soviet National Anthem.
gollark: Oh. That thing. Hmm.
gollark: Did you run into my security system?

References

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