Urocerus gigas
Appearance
Urocerus gigas | |
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Female ovipositing | |
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Species: | U. gigas
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Binomial name | |
Urocerus gigas | |
Synonyms | |
Urocerus gigas (giant woodwasp, banded horntail, greater horntail) is a species of sawfly, native to the Palearctic realm and North Africa. Adults are usually between 10 and 40 millimetres (1⁄2 and 1+1⁄2 inches) in length.[1]
- U. gigas gigas
- U. gigas taiganus
U. gigas is a wood-boring insect which attacks softwoods of freshly felled logs/unhealthy trees. The species lives in discrete tunnels, frequently filled with hard packed coarse fibrous frass, hard to dig out from tunnels. The tunnels are large, round, and discrete, between 6 and 7 mm (1⁄4 and 9⁄32 in) in diameter.
Urocerus flavicornis was once considered a subspecies of gigas, but is now a separate species [1].
References
- ^ "Giant Woodwasp- Urocerus gigas". Massnrc.org. 2008-02-25. Retrieved 2014-06-18.
Media related to Urocerus gigas at Wikimedia Commons