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Crustacea: Copepoda - Cerambycoidea.com

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Bolitochara lucida (Gravenhorst)* - In fleshy fungus on old stumps. Very local in Britain;<br />

Co. Dublin.<br />

Bolitochara mulsanti Sharp - Nationally Scarce. In rotten and fungus infested wood, under<br />

bark on fungus-infested pine Pinus, and in fungus Piptoporus betulinus on birch<br />

Betula.<br />

Bolitochara obliqua Erichson* - Under bark of various deciduous trees, especially associated<br />

with the small bracket fungus Trametes versicolor; adult fungal feeder, larvae also<br />

feeding on phloem and dead larvae. Common in Britain & Ireland.<br />

Bolitochara pulchra (Gravenhorst) - Nationally Scarce. In Piptoporus betulinus and other<br />

fungi, under beech Fagus bark and in rotten wood.<br />

Bolitochara reyi Sharp – RDBI. In fungus in woodland; Windsor Great Park.<br />

Autalia impressa (Olivier)* - Abundant in decaying fungi on wood. Britain & Ireland.<br />

Autalia longicornis Scheerpeltz - In fungi on deadwood. Widespread.<br />

Notothecta confusa (Markel) - Nationally Scarce. Occurs with the ant Lasius fuliginosus in<br />

hollow trees and sand-hills.<br />

Dinaraea aequata (Erichson)* - Under bark of beech Fagus and birch Betula. Widespread in<br />

Britain; Killarney & Powerscourt<br />

Dinaraea linearis (Gravenhorst)* - Under bark. Un<strong>com</strong>mon in Britain; Killarney.<br />

Paranopleta inhabilis (Kraatz) – RDBK. Under bark of Scot's Pine Pinus sylvestris,<br />

Highlands & SE England.<br />

Dadobia immersa (Erichson)* - Under pine Pinus bark. Widespread in Britain; Co. Kerry.<br />

Atheta autumnalis (Erichson) – RDBK. One found in damp rotten wood of a lying willow<br />

Salix in a field by the River Wye in Herefordshire (1936). On Continent associated<br />

with deadwood and wood-rotting fungi; a rare species of middle and southern Europe.<br />

Atheta boletophila (Thomson) – RDBK. Has been found in bracket fungus Pholiota adiposa<br />

on spruce; Rothiemurchus Forest, 1968. Very rare, although widely scattered<br />

throughout central Europe, where associated with Fomes on Fagus; associated with<br />

Pseudotrametes gibbosa, Piptoporus betulinus and Laetiporus sulphureus in Sweden.<br />

Atheta consanguinea (Eppels.) – RDBK. Found in debris in hollow beech Fagus and elm<br />

Ulmus stumps; also in haystack litter and in nest of brown tree ant Lasius brunneus;<br />

Britain; widely distributed but rare in C. Europe & Scandinavia.<br />

Atheta hansseni Strand – RDBK. Recorded in sap-soaked moss on birch Betula, and in nest<br />

material in hole in Scots pine Pinus sylvestris; Highlands.<br />

Atheta hybrida (Sharp) – RDBK. Found at sap; Yorks & Midlothian.<br />

Atheta laevicauda Sahlb., J. – RDBK. Cornwall & Devon; under bark on deadwood. Boreoalpine<br />

distribution, in mid-Europe inhabiting the sub-alpine parts of the higher<br />

mountains.<br />

Atheta liturata (Stephens) - On bracket fungi in old woods and parks; widespread in Britain.<br />

Atheta picipes (Thomson)* - Nationally Scarce. At tree roots, under dead bark, in wooddecay<br />

fungi such as Piptoporus betulinus, Meripilus giganteus & Hypholoma; also in<br />

tussocks. Britain. Rare in Ireland.<br />

Atheta pilicornis (Thomson)* - Nationally Scarce. Chiefly subcortical; also in wood-decay<br />

fungi, moss and among dead leaves; damp woodlands.<br />

Atheta subglabra (Sharp) - In rotten wood of elm Ulmus and ash Fraxinus.<br />

Atheta taxiceroides Munster - In tree hollow nests of birds or mammals; Hampshire to Kent.<br />

Boreo-alpine, a rarity confined to northern Norway and the Beskid Mountains in<br />

central Europe.<br />

Thamiaraea cinnamomea (Gravenhorst) - At the exuding frass of goat moth Cossus colonised<br />

trees.<br />

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