Polyphagozerra coffeae

Zeuzera coffeae
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Cossidae
Genus: Polyphagozerra
Species: P. coffeae
Binomial name
Polyphagozerra coffeae
Nietner, 1861
Synonyms
  • Zeuzera coffeae Nietner, 1861
  • Zeuzera oblita Swinhoe, 1890
  • Zeuzera coffeae virens Toxopeus, 1948
  • Zeuzera coffeae angulata Arora, 1976

The Red Coffee Borer (Polyphagozerra coffeae) is a moth of the Cossidae family. It is found in the Oriental Region. Records from the Moluccas and New Guinea refer to Polyphagozerra reticulata, which was previously considered to be a synonym of P. coffeae.[1]

The wingspan is 70–80 mm.[2] Females are much larger and relatively rare. Adults have dark speckles on their wings. These are metallic greenish in females and metallic blue or black in males.[3]

The larvae feed on a wide range of plants, including Casuarina, Erythroxylum, Acalypha, Phyllanthus, Doryalis, Hydnocarpus, Annona, Cinnamomum, Persea, Phoebe, Amherstia, Cassia, Pericopsis, Xylia, Gossypium, Hibiscus, Cedrela, Chukrasia, Melia, Swietenia, Psidium, Grevillea, Crataegus, Eriobotrya, Coffea, Citrus, Santalum, Filicium, Nephelium, Schleichera, Cestrum, Theobroma, Cryptomeria, Camellia, Clerodendrum, Lantana, Tectona and Vitex species.[4] The larvae occasionally reach pest status on coffee, tea, cotton, cocoa, kapok, coca and teak. They bore into the stem or branches of their host plant.[5]

References


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