throughout the world. As they are host-plant
specific, some are minor crop pests or potential
vectors of crop diseases, while others have been used
with some success for biological control of invasive
weeds such as gorse and broom. The Sweet Potato
Weevil Cylas formicarius is a significant pest of sweet
potato throughout the warmer regions of the world.
cases on plant galls, and the larvae, which
develop inside the plant, are restricted to a
single species or a few related plant species
notes
Males of some species of Brentinae display
remarkable size variation and are among
the few groups of weevils where males
compete with one another. The females are
smaller and often lack the exaggerated
ornamentation of some males
The brentid subfamily Ithycerinae has only
one living species, the large, gray and white New
York Weevil, Ithycerus noveboracensis. Found only in
eastern USA and southern Canada, it seems to
have no known close relatives.
opposite | Apion rubiginosum
(Apioninae) Feeding on sheep’s
sorrel throughout northern Europe,
this is a typical member of the large
subfamily Apioninae.
left | Cyphagogus
Breeding in dead
wood, in this case
in Singapore, many
Cyphagogus have
bizarre modifications
of the head, thorax,
and legs.
below |
Lasiorhynchus
barbicornis Up to
90 mm long, the
New Zealand
Giraffe Weevil is one
of the world’s largest
Brentidae, as well
as one of the few
Brentinae to inhabit
a temperate climate.