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Lyctus planicollis

Southern lyctus beetle
Southern Lyctus beetle.jpg
Southern lyctus beetle
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Superfamily: Bostrichoidea
Family: Bostrichidae
Subfamily: Lyctinae
Genus: Lyctus
Species: L. planicollis
Binomial name
Lyctus planicollis
(LeConte, 1858)

Lyctus planicollis is a wood-boring beetle in the family Bostrichidae (formerly in the family Lyctidae, which is now a subfamily of Bostrichidae), commonly known as the southern lyctus beetle or lyctid powderpost beetle. It is a serious pest of hardwoods including ash, hickory, oak, maple and mahogany and can infest many products in the home including hardwood flooring and structural timbers, plywood, furniture, tool handles, picture frames, baskets and ladders. Timber can be infested in one location and then be transported large distances by ship, after which the beetles can emerge and spread the infestation to new areas.

The adult beetle ranges from four to six millimetres in length and is a dark brownish-black. The head is prominent and is not covered by the pronotum. The antennae have eleven segments, the end two being broadened giving a club-like effect. The body is elongated and slightly flattened with the pronotum wider than it is long. The elytra are ridged longitudinally, with double rows of small puncture marks between the ridges. The body is covered by a sparse, short yellowish down.

The female beetle mates soon after emerging in the spring and lays up to fifty eggs over the course of a week. The eggs are white, cylindrical and about one millimetre long. They are laid deep inside holes in wood, either in the tunnels made by emerging adults or in pores, cracks and crevices. The eggs hatch in one to three weeks depending on the temperature.

The larvae are cream-coloured and grow to about seven millimetres long as they tunnel deeper into the wood, leaving behind them the powderlike frass of wood debris that gives them their common name. They feed on the starchy content of the wood as they are unable to digest cellulose. Young larvae chew their way along the grain of sapwood but older larvae may tunnel across the grain. They may come near to the surface but do not break through. When the larvae are ready to pupate, they build pupal chambers close to the surface.

Metamorphosis takes from twelve days to a month. The adults break out of the pupae and chew their way to the surface leaving behind circular holes. The little wisps of sawdust that fall from these may be the first sign of an infestation. The adult beetles are nocturnal and may live for up to three months. The whole life cycle takes about a year but can vary from six months to four years. In heated buildings development occurs quickly but in adverse environments, growth is slower and the larvae may hibernate in colder regions. This is the main reason for the variability in the length of the life cycle.


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