Black Turpentine Beetle – Dendroctonus tenebrans
Black Turpentine Beetle (Dendroctonus tenebrans)
Latin Name: Dendroctonus tenebrans
Common Name: Black Turpentine Beetle
Appearance:
- Adults are cylindrical, dark reddish-brown to black, and 5 to 8 mm long. This is the biggest species of bark beetle in the southeastern United States. The antennae are clubbed, and the skull is convex in front. The front of the pronotum (the hard shell on top of the insect’s midsection) is significantly thinner than the back.
- Dendroctonus frontalis Zimmermann, the southern pine beetle, is Florida’s only other Dendroctonus species. It has a similar form to the black turpentine beetle but is considerably tiny, measuring just 2 to 3 mm in length.
- Mature larvae are around 12 mm long, are creamy white, legless, and have reddish-brown heads. Pupae are waxy-white and about the size of an adult.