Japanese Beetle Bug
2006/07/14 11:05 AM Filed in:
Picture
This isn't Beaker related but there
were a bunch of these neat green
beetles on my front lawn. Just had
to get some pictures. Bugs are so
neat. I've seen quite a few rather
large beetles here in PA so this
guy isn't huge but still quite
cool.
Green June Beetle (Cotinus nitida)
Description : 3/4 - 7/8" (20-23 mm). Robust, elongate, somewhat flattened. Head dark, with a horn. Pronotum and elytra are metallic green with brownish yellow on the sides; the underside is glittery green and brownish yellow. Tibiae green; femora are brownish yellow. Larva, to 2" (50 mm), is yellowish white with brown head.
Habitat : Gardens, orchards, open woods, and crop fields, particularly above sandy soil.
Range : New York to Florida and Gulf states, north to Missouri.
Food : Adult drinks pollen from open flowers, such as hollyhock, and devours ripening fruits, especially peaches, and the foliage and fruits of many trees and shrubs. Larva eats roots of grasses, alfalfa, vegetables, tobacco, ornamental plants, and many other plants.
Life Cycle : Grayish, spherical eggs are laid in soil with high organic content. Larvae often emerge after a prolonged rain, crawl on their backs over soil or through sod, and over winter deep in soil. Larvae develop in earthen cells near soil surface and pupate in the late spring of the 2nd year after hatching. Adults emerge June-July. 1 generation a year.
Adults fly noisily at night in search of food. This beetle is often an agricultural pest because its larvae destroy the roots of valuable plants, especially tobacco.
Green June Beetle (Cotinus nitida)
Description : 3/4 - 7/8" (20-23 mm). Robust, elongate, somewhat flattened. Head dark, with a horn. Pronotum and elytra are metallic green with brownish yellow on the sides; the underside is glittery green and brownish yellow. Tibiae green; femora are brownish yellow. Larva, to 2" (50 mm), is yellowish white with brown head.
Habitat : Gardens, orchards, open woods, and crop fields, particularly above sandy soil.
Range : New York to Florida and Gulf states, north to Missouri.
Food : Adult drinks pollen from open flowers, such as hollyhock, and devours ripening fruits, especially peaches, and the foliage and fruits of many trees and shrubs. Larva eats roots of grasses, alfalfa, vegetables, tobacco, ornamental plants, and many other plants.
Life Cycle : Grayish, spherical eggs are laid in soil with high organic content. Larvae often emerge after a prolonged rain, crawl on their backs over soil or through sod, and over winter deep in soil. Larvae develop in earthen cells near soil surface and pupate in the late spring of the 2nd year after hatching. Adults emerge June-July. 1 generation a year.
Adults fly noisily at night in search of food. This beetle is often an agricultural pest because its larvae destroy the roots of valuable plants, especially tobacco.
