Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Epicauta

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Kingdom
  
Scientific name
  
Epicauta

Phylum
  
Order
  
Beetle

Family
  
Higher classification
  
Blister beetle

Rank
  
Genus


Similar
  
Blister beetle, Beetle, Insect, Tenebrionoidea, Lytta

Epicauta is a genus of beetles in the blister beetle family, Meloidae. The genus was first scientifically described in 1834 by Pierre François Marie Auguste Dejean. Epicauta is distributed nearly worldwide, with species native to all continents except Australia. Surveys have found the genus to be particularly diverse in northern Arizona in the United States. Few species occur in the Arctic, with none farther north than the southern Northwest Territory of Canada.

Contents

Epicauta Epicauta fabricii Epicauta fabricii BugGuideNet

Sainika hula / Epicauta / wild life / insects / village life


Adult beetles feed on plants. The larvae are predators on the eggs of grasshoppers. The beetles can significantly damage plants, and many Epicauta are known as agricultural pests around the world, even known to cause crop failures at times. As do other blister beetles, these produce cantharidin, a toxic terpenoid which can kill animals such as horses if they ingest enough of the beetles.

Epicauta Epicauta fabricii Epicauta fabricii BugGuideNet

This is one of the largest blister beetle genera, with about 360 described species as of 2011.

Epicauta hirticornis hsinchu taiwan 18 vi 2014


Epicauta Epicauta pennsylvanica

Epicauta httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsdd

Epicauta Tan blister beetle Epicauta strigosa BugGuideNet

References

Epicauta Wikipedia