Anoplophora

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Anoplophora
Anoplophora chinensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Clade: Pancrustacea
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Suborder: Polyphaga
Infraorder: Cucujiformia
Family: Cerambycidae
Tribe: Lamiini
Genus: Anoplophora
Hope, 1839
Species

see text

Synonyms
  • Oplophora Hope, 1839
  • Calloplophora Thomson, 1864
  • Melanauster Thomson, 1868
  • Cyriocrates Thomson, 1868
  • Micromelanauster Pic, 1931
  • Falsocyriocrates Pic, 1953
  • Mimonemophas Breuning, 1961

Anoplophora is a genus of beetles in the longhorn beetle family (Cerambycidae). They are native to Asia.[1] Most are large and colorful and thus are depicted in artwork and sought after by beetle collectors.[2] The genus also includes several notorious pest insects.[1]

Beetles of Anoplophora are 1 to 5 centimeters in length. They are spotted or banded with a range of color patterns in shades of yellow, blue, purple, and white.[2] They have very long antennae.[1] One characteristic that is particularly useful for distinguishing the species from one another is the structure of the male genitalia.[3]

Impacts

Several Anoplophora species are major pests of urban, ornamental, and agricultural trees.

The Asian long-horned beetle (A. glabripennis) is native to China and Korea,[2] and it is now widespread in Europe as an introduced species. Populations of this beetle have been detected in some locations in North America, including Toronto, Chicago, New Jersey, Ohio, Massachusetts, and New York City, and have either been declared eradicated, or are currently being dealt with under an eradication program. Many tree species can serve as hosts to the beetle, but it especially favors maples.[4]

The citrus long-horned beetle (A. chinensis; syn. A. malasiaca) has been introduced from Asia to Europe and North America. It is a pest of citrus and other fruit and nut trees. It infests forest trees and ornamentals. It attacks over 100 species of trees, shrubs, and herbs from many plant families. Damage from its wood-boring larvae can kill trees.[1]

Diversity

In a 2002 revision of the genus, 36 species were recognized.[2] At least nine more species have been described since then, and additional revisionary work has subsumed several other genera into Anoplophora, so it includes over 50 species at present.[5]

Genomics

Chromosome-level genome assemblies for species in the genus Anoplophora were published in 2026, including Anoplophora glabripennis and Anoplophora malasiaca. The genome sizes are approximately 708–730 Mb, with over 95% of each assembly anchored to 10 and 15 chromosomes, respectively. The assemblies have BUSCO completeness scores above 99%, and approximately 23,000–23,500 protein-coding genes were predicted.[6]

Species

References

Further reading

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