Tuesday, 18 December 2007
Christmas Beetle
Christmas Beetle – Anoplognatius porosus.
At Christmas time in Australia, huge numbers can suddenly appear on a Eucalyptus tree and look just like the decorations on Christmas tree. They are metallic green in colour and have a beautiful texture on their wing covers. They're about 25-30 mm in length.
Christmas Beetle female lay eggs in soil or compost in spring and early summer. Larvae live in the soil. They feed on decaying organic matter or roots. They pupate in soil as well. Adult beetles emerge during the early to mid summer period from soil. They are extremely voracious feeders and large swarms can rapidly defoliate trees in young eucalypt plantations and are regarded as important pests.
(I went to a store to buy some insecticide. “Is this good for beetles?” I asked the clerk. “No,” he replied. “It’ll kill ‘em.”)
Labels:
Anoplognatius porosus,
Christmas Beetle
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2007
(300)
-
▼
December
(50)
- The Last Post
- Help!
- Spirit of Christmas
- Australian Tourism: questions answered
- Bitter water
- e=mc2
- Hokey-cokey
- Clothing label
- Little Bits of Christmas
- My head hurts
- My Fair Lady
- Happy Christmas to one and all
- Father Christmas
- Top Gear
- Brussels Sprouts
- It's nearly Christmas
- That good old song again..
- Pick up a Penguin
- Your most embarrassing moment
- Keep warm this Christmas
- Have a nice week-end
- Blobfish
- More wit of Stephen Wright
- Christmas Beetle
- What's a drib and what's a drab?
- The Wit of Steven Wright
- Burmese lake
- Welwitschia mirabilis
- Growing Garlic
- The Lion King
- And I thought the Mersey was bad!
- Inferior?
- Wollemia nobilis
- Computer humour
- Oh dear! or words to that effect..
- Early memories
- The Little Street
- The Magic Roundabout
- Like a shot
- Thesaurus Rex
- It's older than you think
- Bumper Stickers
- Things not to behold
- Wonderful things to behold
- A lecture about English
- Colour test
- The Deep
- Vegware
- A1GP
- Author's Deaths
-
▼
December
(50)
Sound like the rose chafers we get here in colour, don't you think? They're my fave bugs to look at around may-aug. By the way, quiz answers now published on my blog.
ReplyDeleteThese look rather like the June bugs that appear in Thesaurus Rex's garedn during the summer. They are attracted to the flowers on his mexican orange bush and add a most decorative effect when the sun glints off their shiny wing cases.
ReplyDelete