Macrocoma sacra

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Macrocoma sacra
Scientific classification Red Pencil Icon.png
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Chrysomelidae
Genus: Macrocoma
Species:
M. sacra
Binomial name
Macrocoma sacra
(Lopatin, 1983)
Synonyms [1]

Pseudocolaspis sacraLopatin, 1983

Macrocoma sacra is a species of leaf beetle of Saudi Arabia [2] and Pakistan, [3] described by Lopatin in 1983.

Related Research Articles

Eumolpinae Subfamily of leaf beetles

The Eumolpinae are a subfamily of the leaf beetles, or Chrysomelidae. It is one of the largest subfamilies of leaf beetles, including more than 500 genera and 7000 species. They are oval, and convex in form, and measure up to 10 mm in size. Typical coloration for this subfamily of beetles ranges from bright yellow to dark red. Many species are iridescent or brilliantly metallic blue or green in appearance.

Macrocoma aladina is a species of leaf beetle of Saudi Arabia, described by Daccordi & Medvedev in 1996.

Macrocoma budura is a species of leaf beetle of Saudi Arabia, described by Daccordi & Medvedev in 1996.

Macrocoma buettikeriana is a species of leaf beetle of Saudi Arabia, Oman and Egypt described by Daccordi in 1979.

Macrocoma lefevrei is a species of leaf beetle of Saudi Arabia, Oman, Yemen, Iran and Egypt. It was first described by Joseph Sugar Baly in 1878.

Macrocoma millingeni is a species of leaf beetle of Saudi Arabia, described by Pic in 1898.

Macrocoma saudica is a species of leaf beetle of Saudi Arabia and Egypt, described by Medvedev in 1996.

Macrocoma brunnea is a species of leaf beetle of Yemen, described by Bryant in 1957.

Macrocoma djurdjurensis is a species of leaf beetle of Algeria, described by Andrzej Warchałowski in 2001.

Macrocoma divisa is a species of leaf beetle endemic to the Canary Islands. It was first described by Thomas Vernon Wollaston in 1864 as a species of Pseudocolaspis. It has been reported from Lanzarote, Fuerteventura and Graciosa.

Macrocoma dubia is a species of leaf beetle endemic to the Canary Islands. It was first described by Thomas Vernon Wollaston in 1864 as a species of Pseudocolaspis. It has been reported from Fuerteventura and Lanzarote.

Macrocoma latifrons is a species of leaf beetle endemic to the Canary Islands. It was first described by Harald Lindberg in 1953. It is found on Tenerife.

Macrocoma oromiana is a species of leaf beetle found on Alegranza in the Canary Islands and on Selvagem Grande in the Savage Islands, described by Mauro Daccordi in 1978.

Macrocoma splendens is a species of leaf beetle endemic to the Canary Islands. It was first described by Harald Lindberg in 1950. It is reported from Tenerife and La Palma.

Macrocoma splendidula is a species of leaf beetle endemic to the Canary Islands, described by Thomas Vernon Wollaston in 1862.

<i>Macrocoma</i> Genus of leaf beetles

Macrocoma is a genus of leaf beetles in the subfamily Eumolpinae. It contains about 100 species, which are found in tropical Africa, around the Mediterranian, on the Canary Islands, in western and central Asia, and in India. Macrocoma has sometimes been considered a synonym of Pseudocolaspis.

Macrocoma leprieuri is a species of leaf beetle from North Africa and the Middle East. It was first described by Édouard Lefèvre in 1876, as a species of Pachnephorus.

Macrocoma setosa is a species of leaf beetle found in Algeria and Morocco described by Hippolyte Lucas in 1846.

Macrocoma henoni is a species of leaf beetle from North Africa and the Middle East. It was first described by Maurice Pic in 1894, as a species of Pseudocolaspis.

<i>Macrocoma rubripes</i> Species of beetle

Macrocoma rubripes is a species of leaf beetle from Europe, Asia and possibly North Africa. It was first described by Ludwig Wilhelm Schaufuss in 1862, as a species of Pseudocolaspis.

References

  1. Warchałowski, A. (2001). "A preliminary review of Western Palaearctic Macrocoma CHEVROLAT, 1837 (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Eumolpinae)". Genus. 12 (4): 449–477. CiteSeerX   10.1.1.631.3702 .
  2. "African Eumolpinae checklist: Saudi Arabia". chrysomelidae.it. Retrieved July 27, 2016.
  3. Nadein, K.; Ahmed, Z.; Sergeev, M. (2012). "Distributional notes on Chrysomelidae from Pakistan and Afghanistan (Coleoptera)" (PDF). Beiträge zur Entomologie. 62 (1): S225–S233.