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・ Eupoca bifascialis
・ Eupoca chicalis
・ Eupoca definita
・ Eupoca haakei
・ Eupoca leucolepia
・ Eupoca micralis
・ Eupoca polyorma
・ Eupoca sanctalis
・ Eupodalecia
・ Eupodes
・ Eupodiscaceae
・ Eupodium
・ Eupodophis
・ Eupodotis
・ Eupoecila
Eupoecila australasiae
・ Eupoecila evanescens
・ Eupoecila inscripta
・ Eupoecila intricata
・ Eupoecila miskini
・ Eupoecilia
・ Eupoecilia aburica
・ Eupoecilia acrographa
・ Eupoecilia ambiguella
・ Eupoecilia amphimnesta
・ Eupoecilia anebrica
・ Eupoecilia angustana
・ Eupoecilia anisoneura
・ Eupoecilia armifera
・ Eupoecilia cebrana


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Eupoecila australasiae : ウィキペディア英語版
Eupoecila australasiae

''Eupoecila australasiae'', commonly known as the fiddler beetle or rose chafer, is a colourful green- or yellow-and-black member of the scarab beetle family from eastern Australia.
The fiddler beetle was originally described by Anglo Irish naturalist Edward Donovan as ''Cetonia australasiae'' in his 1805 work ''An Epitome of the Natural History of the Insects of New Holland, New Zealand, New Guinea, Otaheite, and other Islands in the Indian, Southern, and Pacific Oceans''. It was reclassified in and became the type species of the new genus ''Eupoecila'' by German entomologist Hermann Burmeister in 1842.〔Burmeister, H.C.C. 1842. Handbuch der Entomologie. Coleoptera Lamellicornia Melitophila. Berlin : T.C.F. Enslin Vol. 3 pp. xxii 827 ().〕 Within the scarab family, it is a member of the subfamily Cetoniinae, commonly known as flower chafers. These beetles are strong flyers and can fly without moving the elytra; they spend much of the time searching for nectar and plant exudates.〔(Environment Australia )〕
Its common name is derived from its patterned body, reminiscent of a violin.
The fiddler beetle measures in length, its body patterned dark brown and lime green to yellow.
It is found in eastern Australia, in Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, and southeastern South Australia, and lives in heathland and eucalypt woodland, as well as suburban parks and gardens.〔
Eggs are laid in rotting logs, or in debris or soil. The larvae eat rotting wood until they mature and pupate there by making a cocoon-like chamber within the wood. Adult beetles burrow through the soil and emerge in early summer, and feed on nectar-laden flowers.〔 These include ''Angophora hispida'' and ''A. woodsiana'', ''Backhousia citriodora'', and ''Melaleuca linariifolia''.
==References==



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