Bobitobus cinctus
(Gravenhorst, 1802)
Bobitobus cinctus is a of rove beetle in the Staphylinidae, Mycetoporinae. It is a small, predatory found in eastern North America. The species was described by Gravenhorst in 1802. Like other rove beetles, it has short that leave most of the exposed.
Pronunciation
How to pronounce Bobitobus cinctus: //bɔˈbi.to.bʊs ˈkɪŋk.tʊs//
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Distribution
Eastern North America: Canada (New Brunswick, Ontario, Quebec) and United States (Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Georgia, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Maryland, Maine, Michigan, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Wisconsin, West Virginia).
Sources and further reading
- BugGuide
- GBIF taxonomy match
- Catalogue of Life
- A Good Morning for a Bee | Bug Squad
- Rosie defoliators: Roseslug sawfly, Endelomyia aethiops, Curled rose sawfly, Allantus cinctus, and Bristley rose sawfly, Cladius pectinicornis — Bug of the Week
- Rosie defoliators - Roseslug sawfly, Endelomyia aethiops, Curled rose sawfly, Allantus cinctus, and Cladius pectinicornis — Bug of the Week
- Sawflies - Curled rose sawfly, Allantus cinctus, and dusky birch sawfly, Croesus latitarsus — Bug of the Week
- Archive — Bug of the Week