False Loghorn Leaf Beetle – Donacia piscatrix
False Loghorn Leaf Beetle – Donaciapiscatrix
Common Name: False Loghorn Leaf Beetle
Latin Name: Donaciapiscatrix
Appearance:
- Most leaf beetle species are between 1.0 and 18 mm in length, excluding appendages, with just a few bigger species, such as Alurnus humeralis, which grows to 35 mm.
- Leaf beetles have small to medium-sized. Most species have domed, oval bodies visible from the dorsal view (although others are spherical or elongated), and they frequently have various colors or metallic sheen.
- Most specimens have antennae that are noticeably shorter than the head, thorax, and abdomen or not much longer than half of these three body parts combined.
- The size of the second antennal segment is typical (which differentiates leaf beatles from the closely related longhorn beetles). Although most species’ antennal details have a roughly identical form and only progressively broaden near the tip, certain Galerucinae, particularly the males, have changed segments. In most circumstances, the antenna’s first section is bigger than its succeeding ones. Different species of leaf beetles have different pronotums.