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Male Elm Sawfly I went out today in search of rare plants and found crazy insects. This thing is freaky. This one is a male, the females have white stripes on their abdomens. He likely emerged from his cocoon quite recently. Cimbex americana,Elm Sawfly,Geotagged,Spring,United States Click/tap to enlarge PromotedSpecies introCountry intro

Male Elm Sawfly

I went out today in search of rare plants and found crazy insects. This thing is freaky. This one is a male, the females have white stripes on their abdomens. He likely emerged from his cocoon quite recently.

    comments (3)

  1. This is a Sawfly, Hymenoptera Posted 10 years ago, modified 10 years ago
    1. Thanks! I would have been searching a long time to find this one. Posted 10 years ago
      1. I was looking for a match but then you beat me to it, a good thing :) Posted 10 years ago

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The Elm Sawfly is a large, robust insect about 20-25 millimeters in body length. They appear even bigger, especially the males with their beefy “thighs” (femora) on the middle and hind legs. The jaws of both genders are strong, and used to strip bark from twigs, sometimes girdling them in their efforts to reach the tasty sap. The clubbed, relatively short antennae are a characteristic of all members of the family Cimbicidae.

Species identified by morpheme
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By morpheme

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Uploaded May 1, 2015. Captured Apr 30, 2015 16:03 in Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest, U.S. 2, Leavenworth, WA 98826, USA.
  • X-E1
  • f/1.0
  • 1/500s
  • ISO800
  • 50mm