Pine-oak-forest

Guides

  • Aseptis ethnica

    Aseptis ethnica is a noctuid moth described by John Bernhardt Smith in 1899. It occurs in western North America from Arizona and California north to western Oregon, and extends into Baja California Norte, Mexico. Adults fly from early May through August. The species is associated with open pine-oak forests and mountain chaparral, with larvae feeding on Arctostaphylos species.

  • Diplocentrus spitzeri

    Ruby Rock Scorpion

    Diplocentrus spitzeri is a scorpion species in the family Diplocentridae, endemic to the Sierra Madre Occidental in Sonora, Mexico. The species exhibits distinctive maternal care behaviors, including a specialized birth posture where the female elevates her body on her legs and pedipalps while young emerge from the genital opercula and climb onto her back. First instar young remain on the mother's back until their first molt, during which time the female displays defensive behaviors to protect them. The species inhabits rocky pine-oak forest environments, where it shelters under stones and in rock crevices.

  • Osmia foxi

    Osmia foxi is a species of mason bee in the family Megachilidae, subgenus Melanosmia. It was long considered enigmatic, known only from the male holotype until its redescription in 2011, which included the first description of the female. The species is restricted to the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico, where it occurs in montane pine-oak forest habitats. It exhibits the metallic coloration typical of many Osmia species.