Pteropliini

Guides

  • Ataxia

    Ataxia is a genus of longhorn beetles (Cerambycidae: Lamiinae: Pteropliini) described by Haldeman in 1847. Species in this genus are found in the Americas and are associated with herbaceous plants, particularly members of the Asteraceae family. The genus includes species such as Ataxia hubbardi, which breeds in living tissues of plants including Helianthus, Ambrosia, and Silphium species. Some populations show morphological variation associated with specific host plants.

  • Ataxia arizonica

    Ataxia arizonica is a species of longhorned beetle in the family Cerambycidae, described by Warren Samuel Fisher in 1920. The species is known from Mexico and the United States. As a member of the genus Ataxia, it belongs to a group of beetles whose larvae typically bore into plant stems and roots.

  • Ataxia crypta

    Ataxia crypta is a longhorn beetle (Cerambycidae) described by Thomas Say in 1831, originally placed in the genus Lamia. It is distributed across the United States and Mexico. The species belongs to the subfamily Lamiinae and tribe Pteropliini. Like other members of its genus, it likely develops in living or recently dead herbaceous plants, though specific host associations for this species remain poorly documented.

  • Ataxia spinicauda

    Ataxia spinicauda is a longhorned beetle (family Cerambycidae) described by Schaeffer in 1904. It belongs to the subfamily Lamiinae and tribe Pteropliini. The species has been documented from the Bahamas, Cuba, Jamaica, and the United States, indicating a Caribbean-North American distribution pattern. Like other members of the genus Ataxia, it likely develops in living plant tissues, though specific host associations for this species remain undocumented.