Biology:Hexarthrius melchioritis

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Short description: Species of beetle

Hexarthrius melchioritis
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Lucanidae
Genus: Hexarthrius
Species:
H. melchioritis
Binomial name
Hexarthrius melchioritis
(Séguy, 1954)

Hexarthrius melchioritis is a species of beetle, which belongs to the family of stag beetles (Lucanidae) in the group Scarabaeoidea.[1]

It was first described in 1954 by French entomologist, Eugène Séguy. The species is endemic to northern Myanmar.

Appearance

A large (males 35–71 millimeter), glossy, brown-black stag beetle. The male's jaws are long, quite straight, with an inward-facing tooth just outside the middle, with scattered, small teeth along the inner edge, pointed at the tip. This species is slimmer in build than most other Hexarthrius species. The antennas are quite thin, with a small, six-joint fan. The pronotum is rectangular, much wider than long. The female is completely black, much smaller than the male, with no strikingly enlarged jaws.[2]

Life cycle

The larvae develop in rotten tree trunks.

Systematic classification

Template:Tree[3]

Wikidata ☰ Q2182014 entry

References

  1. Sabatier, Paul (1975). Nouvelle Revue D'entomologie. 5-6. Laboratoire de Zoologie de la Faculté des Sciences. p. 267. 
  2. Laboratoire D'entromologie (Muséum National D'histoire Naturelle) (1952). Revue Française D'entomologie. 19-21. Association des Amis du Laboratoire D'entomologie du Muséum. p. 269. 
  3. Overview of the species