Larval-description-available
Guides
Chrysobothris bacchari
coyote bush buprestid
Chrysobothris bacchari is a metallic wood-boring beetle in the family Buprestidae, commonly known as the coyote bush buprestid. The species is native to North America and was first described by Van Dyke in 1923. Its common name suggests an association with coyote bush (Baccharis spp.), though specific host relationships require further documentation. The larval stage has been formally described from specimens in the United States and Mexico.
Chrysobothris nixa
flatheaded cedar borer
Chrysobothris nixa, commonly known as the flatheaded cedar borer, is a metallic wood-boring beetle in the family Buprestidae. It is found in North America, with distribution records from British Columbia and Saskatchewan in Canada. The species was described by Horn in 1886 and is one of eleven Chrysobothris species whose larvae were described in a 1966 study of buprestid larvae from the H. E. Burke Collection.
Rhagomicrus bonvouloiri
Rhagomicrus bonvouloiri is a species of false click beetle (Coleoptera: Eucnemidae) in the subfamily Melasinae. The larva has been formally described from the Nearctic region, with biological notes provided in a dedicated study. Adult records from Ontario, Canada suggest a limited known distribution. The species is poorly represented in public observation databases, with few documented occurrences.
Tomoxia lineella
Tomoxia lineella is a small tumbling flower beetle in the family Mordellidae. First described by John Lawrence LeConte in 1862, this species is distributed across eastern North America. Its larvae develop in decaying pine wood, specifically within galleries of the ambrosia beetle Xyleborus affinis.