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  2. Woodboring beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodboring_beetle

    The three most species-rich families of woodboring beetles are longhorn beetles, bark beetles and weevils, and metallic flat-headed borers. Woodboring is thought to be the ancestral ecology of beetles, and bores made by beetles in fossil wood extend back to the earliest fossil record of beetles in the Early Permian ( Asselian ), around 295-300 ...

  3. Buprestidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buprestidae

    Buprestidae is a family of beetles known as jewel beetles or metallic wood-boring beetles because of their glossy iridescent colors. Larvae of this family are known as flatheaded borers. The family is among the largest of the beetles, with some 15,500 species known in 775 genera. In addition, almost 100 fossil species have been described. [1]

  4. Common furniture beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_furniture_beetle

    The common furniture beetle or common house borer (Anobium punctatum) is a woodboring beetle originally from Europe [1] but now distributed worldwide. In the larval stage it bores in wood and feeds upon it. Adult Anobium punctatum measure 2.7–4.5 millimetres (0.11–0.18 in) in length.

  5. Woodworm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodworm

    Wood affected by woodworm. Signs of woodworm usually consist of holes in the wooden item, with live infestations showing powder (faeces), known as frass, around the holes.. The size of the holes varies, but they are typically 1 to 1.5 millimetres (5 ⁄ 128 to 1 ⁄ 16 in) in diameter for the most common household species, although they can be much larger in the case of the house longhorn beet

  6. Rosalia funebris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosalia_funebris

    Like many other species in the family Cerambycidae, R. funebris has strikingly colored wing covers . The elytra are dark with three white bands. The thorax is white with a large black spot. The alder borer's antennae are banded white and black. The male's antennae are longer than the body; the female's are shorter.

  7. Monochamus scutellatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monochamus_scutellatus

    Wood-boring insects can degrade the wood aesthetically by boring holes, and also indirectly as vectors for fungi and nematodes which can cause structural damage. [ 5 ] Allison et al. [ 11 ] extrapolated information from one mill in southern British Columbia to suggest that wood-boring insects could cause an annual loss of US$43.6 million per ...

  8. Trichocnemis spiculatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trichocnemis_spiculatus

    Common names include pine sawyer, western pine sawyer, spined woodborer, and ponderosa pine borer. [2] A taxonomic synonym is Ergates spiculatus. [2] This beetle species develops on fallen ponderosa pines and Douglas firs. [3] T. spiculatus is the largest species of wood boring beetle in Colorado. [3]

  9. Limnoria lignorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limnoria_lignorum

    Limnoria lignorum is a wood borer and in favourable conditions can be present in large numbers, with densities of as many as four hundred individuals per 1 in 3 (16.4 cm 3) of wood. The isopods are very small and the damage is at first confined to near the surface of the wood.