Twolined Chestnut Borer – Agrilus bilineatus
Twolined Chestnut Borer (Agrilus bilineatus)
Latin Name: Agrilus bilineatus
Common Name: Twolined Chestnut Borer
Appearance:
- Adults are dark-colored buprestids with two golden stripes running vertically along the back of their bodies.
- Adult emergence occurs in mid-to-late June in Michigan and the neighboring regions.
- Females deposit their eggs in tiny clusters in cracks and fissures in the bark. Newly born larvae burrow into the tree’s bark and create feeding tunnels.
- When fully grown, larvae are light in color and up to 2.5 cm long; adult beetles fly from April to August, based on where they are located, and each year there is only one generation.
- Two spines at the tip of the abdomen, as is typical of all Agrilus larvae. Larvae build meandering tubes that are densely filled with excrement and boring dust.