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| COLEOPTERA, Brentidae. --  <Images> & <Juveniles>             Brentidae is a cosmopolitan family of primarily
  xylophagous beetles also known as straight-snouted weevils. The concept of
  this family has been recently expanded with the inclusion of three groups
  formerly placed in the Curculionidae; the subfamilies Apioninae, Cyladinae,
  and Nanophyinae, as well as the Ithycerinae, previously considered a separate
  family. They are most diverse in the tropics, but occur throughout the
  temperate regions of the world. They are among the families of weevils that
  have non-elbowed antennae, and tend to be elongate and flattened, though
  there are numerous exceptions.             The subfamilial
  classification of the family has been reorganized by several different
  authors since 1990 and is not yet stable; the most recent, and conservative,
  classification (Oberprieler et al., 2007) accepts only 6 subfamilies, with
  many familiar subfamilial taxa (e.g., Antliarhininae, Cyladinae,
  Cyphagoginae, Myrmacicelinae, and Trachelizinae) now relegated to tribal
  groups, primarily within the subfamily Brentinae.          References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   |