Rosalia longicorn
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Rosalia alpina
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Rosalia alpina (Linnaeus, 1758) |
The Rosalia longicorn (Rosalia alpina) is a large longicorn (family Cerambycidae) that is distinguished by its narrow body and long antennas.
The Rosalia longicorn is 15 to 38 mm long. The antennas can be up to twice as long as the rest of the body in males, and the same length in females. The elytra are flat, blue-gray, with variable black spots, including a prominent one on the thorax, a silky one in front, and a small one in back. Both the antennas and the legs have the same coloration as the body. The coloration serves as good camouflage with their preferred habitat, the European Beech.
They are distributed from the Alps east to Slovakia. Its numbers across Europe has greatly depleted in recent years, and it is a protected species in Germany, Hungary, and Poland.
The adults are active from June to September. By day the beetles sit near flowers and feed on the pollen. The make a chirping sound by scraping their rear legs and elytra together. After mating, the female lays the eggs within a crack in the bark of a beech. The larvae eat the bark and pupate there as well. The mature adult emerges from the pupae, when it has reached about three years of age.
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