Insufficient-data
Guides
Allosirocalus obliquus
Allosirocalus obliquus is a species of beetle in the genus Allosirocalus. The genus is part of the weevil superfamily Curculionoidea, though its precise family placement requires verification. Information regarding this species is limited in available sources.
Antheminia sulcata
Antheminia sulcata is a species of stink bug in the family Pentatomidae, order Hemiptera. The genus Antheminia is part of a group of Old World stink bugs with limited documentation in available English-language sources. Records from iNaturalist indicate observations of this species, though detailed natural history information appears sparse in the accessible literature. The species epithet 'sulcata' refers to grooved or furrowed features, likely describing surface sculpturing on the body.
Anthonomus alboannulatus
Anthonomus alboannulatus is a species of weevil in the family Curculionidae, described by Boheman in 1843. It belongs to the large genus Anthonomus, which contains numerous species associated with various flowering plants. The specific epithet "alboannulatus" refers to white annular markings, suggesting distinctive pale banding on the body. The species is rarely recorded, with minimal observational data available.
Aplastus productus
Aplastus productus is a species of rove beetle in the family Staphylinidae. Information regarding this species is extremely limited in the provided source material. The genus Aplastus belongs to the large and diverse rove beetle family, whose members are characterized by shortened elytra that leave most of the abdomen exposed. No specific observations, habitat associations, or behavioral details for A. productus are documented in the available context.
Emmesa testacea
Tiled False Darkling Beetle
Emmesa testacea is a species of false darkling beetle in the family Melandryidae. The common name "Tiled False Darkling Beetle" refers to this species, though published natural history information is extremely limited. The species is listed in museum collections but lacks substantial observational or ecological documentation in scientific literature. As a member of Melandryidae, it belongs to a family of beetles typically associated with decaying wood and fungal substrates in forested habitats.
Helophorus oblongulus
Helops spretus
Helops spretus is a species of darkling beetle in the family Tenebrionidae, described by George Henry Horn in 1880. The genus Helops belongs to a diverse family of beetles commonly found in arid and semi-arid environments. Members of this genus are typically elongate and somewhat flattened in body form. No specific biological or ecological information for H. spretus has been documented in the provided sources.
Loensia
Pemphigus longicornis
Phylloxera falsostium
Trotteria
Trotteria is a genus with conflicting taxonomic assignments across major databases. Catalogue of Life classifies it as a fungal genus within Ascomycota (family Trichothyriaceae), while iNaturalist treats it as an insect genus within Diptera (family Cecidomyiidae). This homonymy reflects either a genuine naming collision or a significant taxonomic error in one source. The genus has minimal documented usage, with only 3 observations in iNaturalist and no Wikipedia entry.