taxonID	type	description	language	source
03FB2B70FF9EA86E6EC7FDC0F3CB126C.taxon	description	(Fig. 1 – 6, 13 – 14)	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF9EA86E6EC7FDC0F3CB126C.taxon	materials_examined	Type specimens. Holotype ♂: “ ARIZONA: Cochise Co., west / slope of Dragoon Mountains, / Middlemarch Road 21.0 km NE / of Highway 80 1695 m / 31 ° 51.586 ʹN, 109 ° 57.498 ʹW / 21 June 2021 N. E. Woodley // sweeping Sapindus / saponaria var. drummondii / (Hook. & Arn.) L. D. Benson / [Sapindaceae] // HOLOTYPE ♂ / Agrilus / botzi / Woodley 2024 ” (USNM). Paratypes: 1 ♂, 1 ♀, same data as holotype (1 ♀, USNM); 3 ♂, 6 ♀, same data as holotype except 3 June 2020 (1 ♂, 1 ♀, FSCA); 2 ♀, same data as holotype except 30 May 2022 (1 ♀, HAHC); 1 ♀, same data as holotype except 11 June 2022; 1 ♂, same data as holotype except 26 May 2023; 1 ♀, same data as holotype except 16 June 2023; 1 ♀, same data as holotype except 18 June 2024; 3 ♀, Cochise Co., Middlemarch Road, Milepost 3, 4.8 km NE of Highway 80, 31 ° 45.674 ʹN, 110 ° 03.019 ʹW, 1370 meters, 29 June 2019, N. E. Woodley, sweeping S. saponaria var. drummondii (1 ♀, USNM); 1 ♂, same data except 1 July 2019; 1 ♂, same data except 30 May 2020 (HAHC); 1 ♂, same data except 1 June 2020; 1 ♀, same data except 30 May 2022; 3 ♂, same data except 10 June 2022 (1 ♂, USNM); 1 ♀, same data except 11 June 2022; 1 ♂, same data except 20 June 2023; 1 ♂, same data except 18 June 2024; 2 ♀, Cochise Co., Cochise Stronghold, 31.9457 ° N, 109.9592 ° W, 4780 feet, 28 August 2010, F. W. Skillman, Jr. (FWSC); 1 ♂, Cochise Co., Cochise Stronghold, 31 ° 56.746 ʹN, 109 ° 57.555 ʹW, 1456 meters, N. E. Woodley, at MV / UV (mercury-vapor / ultraviolet) light; 1 ♂, Cochise Co., North Tex Canyon Road, 11 km NW of Highway 80, 31 ° 59.550 ʹN, 109 ° 18.633 ʹW, 1565 meters, 17 June 2022, N. E. Woodley, sweeping S. saponaria var. drummondii; 1 ♂, same data except J. P. Basham (JPBC); 1 ♀, Santa Cruz Co., roadside stop on Highway 82, 5.8 km SW of Patagonia, 31 ° 30.419 ʹN, 110 ° 48.210 ʹW, 1190 meters, 3 July 2018, Jason T. Botz, sweeping S. saponaria var. drummondii, BugGuide voucher specimen, Image # 1551068; 1 ♀, Santa Cruz Co., Highway 82, 4.8 km SW of Patagonia, 31 ° 30.676 ʹN, 110 ° 47.918 ʹW, 1195 meters, 1 July 2020, S. W. Lingafelter, sweeping S. saponaria var. drummondii. All paratypes have the label PARATYPE ♂ [or ♀] / Agrilus / botzi / Woodley 2024 ”.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF9EA86E6EC7FDC0F3CB126C.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. In Fisher’s (1928) key, A. botzi keys to couplet 73 and best fits A. obsoletoguttatus Gory. Two similar species described subsequent to Fisher, A. limpiae Knull, 1941 and A. exsapindi Vogt, 1949 also key here, and both have been reared from Sapindus. Neither species has a mostly complete elytral vitta, but rather a broken pattern of setal spots. None of these species similar to A. botzi are known from Arizona.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF9EA86E6EC7FDC0F3CB126C.taxon	description	Description. Male (Fig. 1, 3, 5). Overall color coppery-bronze, head, pronotum and legs with a slight greenish tint; pronotum, elytra and venter with distinct setal pattern of white to pale yellowish enhanced by bright white flocculence. Head with frons (Fig. 5) convex, slightly depressed in upper third; surface moderately shiny and feebly rugose, longitudinally rugose on occiput, and clothed with moderately dense, slightly thickened, silvery-white setae; inner eye margins slightly sinuate; clypeus shallowly, arcuately emarginate, separated from frons by a fine transverse carina; antennae extending to posterior margin of pronotum or slightly farther when laid along-side, strongly serrate from antennomere 4. Pronotum with anterior margin slightly produced medially, widest anteriorly, margins subparallel then slightly tapering toward elytral bases; in lateral view marginal carina sinuate, submarginal carina weakly sinuate, the two widely separated anteriorly, converging posteriorly and fused for about posterior one-third; discal region with shallow anteromedial and posteromedial depressions, with more or less transverse rugae medially, these becoming subparallel to pronotal margin laterally; prehumeral carina sharply rounded, straight, extending from posterior angles about one-fourth distance to anterior margin; most of lateral part of pronotum with slightly thickened setae, the patch narrowing posteriorly, and a small patch present medial to the prehumeral carina. Scutellum transversely carinate, with surface finely, transversely microrugose. Elytra (Fig. 1) slightly wider than posterior margin of pronotum; lateral margins nearly straight, slightly constricted at level of first abdominal sternite, exposing dense white setal patch on first laterotergite; with strong basal depression set with slightly thickened setae and white flocculence, similar setae forming longitudinal vittae in line with but separated from basal depressions, gradually converging toward suture at elytral apices; surface imbricately punctate, with short, fine, uniformly distributed setae. Venter with anterior margin of prosternum moderately emarginate medially; prosternal process broad, sides parallel to behind procoxal cavities, then broadly rounded at apex, clothed with semierect, dense, elongate setae that extend to intercoxal projection of first abdominal sternite; lateral portions of thorax, most of metacoxa, large sublateral spots on abdominal sternites 1 – 2 and lateral spots on abdominal sternites 3 – 5 densely setose and covered with dense white flocculence obscuring surface (Fig. 3); laterotergites similarly setose with flocculence except second which has inconspicuous setae and is shiny; bare areas of abdominal sternites finely punctate and microrugose, uniformly set with short, inconspicuous setae; marginal groove present on abdominal sternite 5, weakly present on anterior part of sternite 4, submarginal apex of sternite 5 evenly rounded; pygidium with medial carina not projecting. Legs with metacoxal plate with posterior margin vaguely sinuate; femora without ventral denticles; tibiae slender, straight, pro- and mesotibiae with apical mucro-like spine on inner margin; posterior tarsi slightly shorter than tibiae, tarsomere 1 as long as 2 – 4 united; tarsal claws similar on all legs, with short basal tooth not turned inward. Male genitalia (Fig. 13, 14) tapered posteriorly; parameres very narrow in posterior half; aedeagus broad, tapering to a triangular apex that is very narrowly truncate to slightly rounded. Length 5.72 – 6.25 mm; width at humeri 1.33 – 1.48 mm. Female (Fig. 2, 4, 6). Differs from male as follows: head, including frons (Fig. 6), and pronotum more uniformly colored with elytra and rest of body; antennae shorter, reaching only about two-thirds distance to posterior margin of pronotum when laid along-side; prosternum and ventral medial area of thorax without long, semierect setae; pro- and mesotibiae with apical mucro-like spine on inner margin present but smaller. Length 4.87 – 6.99 mm; width at humeri 1.15 – 1.76 mm.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF9EA86E6EC7FDC0F3CB126C.taxon	etymology	Etymology. The specific epithet, botzi, is named for Jason T. Botz who collected the first specimen from Sapindus which led me to collect further from that host. He has given me a number of interesting buprestids from his collecting over the years.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF9EA86E6EC7FDC0F3CB126C.taxon	distribution	Distribution. At present this species is known only from southeastern Arizona in Cochise and Santa Cruz counties.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF9EA86E6EC7FDC0F3CB126C.taxon	discussion	Discussion. Other than a single specimen collected at MV / UV lights, all specimens have been swept from the foliage of Sapindus saponaria var. drummondii (Hook. & Arn.) L. D. Benson (Sapindaceae). This is almost certainly the larval host.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF98A8606EC7FBB3F6FA107C.taxon	description	(Fig. 7 – 12, 15 – 16)	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF98A8606EC7FBB3F6FA107C.taxon	materials_examined	Type specimens. Holotype ♂: “ ARIZONA: Cochise Co., west / slope of Dragoon Mountains, / Middlemarch Road, 20.5 km NE / of Highway 80 1695 m / 31 ° 51.483 ʹN, 109 ° 57.750 ʹW /, 10 June 2022 N. E. Woodley // on Vachellia constricta / (Benth.) Seigler & / Ebinger [Fabaceae] // HOLOTYPE ♂ / Agrilus / vachiella / Woodley 2024 ” (USNM). Paratypes: 3 ♂, 1 ♀, same data as holotype; 16 ♂, 10 ♀, same data as holotype except 11 June 2022 (2 ♂, 2 ♀, USNM; 2 ♂, 2 ♀, FSCA; 1 ♂, 1 ♀, HAHC; 1 ♂, 1 ♀ UAIC; 1 ♂, ASUC); 1 ♀, same data as holotype except 16 June 2023; 11 ♂, 13 ♀, same data as holotype except 20 June 2023 (2 ♂, 1 ♀, USNM; 1 ♂, 1 ♀, UAIC; 1 ♂, 2 ♀, ASUC); 3 ♂, same data as holotype except 18 June 2024; 4 ♂, 2 ♀, Cochise Co., Geronimo Trail, 11.3 km E of Douglas, 31 ° 21.042 ʹN, 109 ° 23.920 ʹW, 1320 meters, 15 June 2022, N. E. Woodley, on V. constricta. All paratypes have the label PARATYPE ♂ [or ♀] / Agrilus / vachellia / Woodley 2024 ”.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF98A8606EC7FBB3F6FA107C.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. In Fisher’s (1928) key this species keys to couplet 108 and best fits A. prosopidis Fisher but differs from that species by having much denser setae on the male frons, lateral spots of setae on the posterior abdominal sternites, and very different male genitalia. Agrilus vachellia is actually more similar to A. barri Hespenheide & Westcott, especially males that lack the posterior setal spot on the elytra, but again differs by having much denser setae on the male frons, lateral spots of setae on the posterior abdominal sternites, and very different male genitalia.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF98A8606EC7FBB3F6FA107C.taxon	description	Description. Male (Fig. 7, 9, 11). Overall color coppery-bronze, head, pronotum and legs with a greenish tint; pronotum, elytra and venter with distinct setal pattern of white to pale yellowish enhanced by bright white flocculence. Head with frons (Fig. 11) convex, bright yellowish-green, contrasting with bronze vertex; surface not shiny, minutely granulate and punctate, longitudinally rugose on occiput, and clothed with dense, slightly thickened, silvery-white setae that strongly obscure cuticular surface, vertex without setae; inner eye margins slightly sinuate; clypeus shallowly, arcuately emarginate, separated from frons by a weak transverse carina; antennae extending to about middle of pronotum when laid along-side, strongly serrate from antennomere 5. Pronotum with anterior margin slightly produced medially, widest anteriorly, margins subparallel then slightly tapering toward elytral bases; in lateral view marginal carina sinuate, submarginal carina nearly straight, the two widely separated anteriorly, converging posteriorly and very slightly separate at posterior pronotal angle; discal region with narrow, very shallow medial depression, with transverse rugae medially that are very narrowly broken by medial depression, these becoming subparallel to pronotal margin laterally; prehumeral carina sharply rounded, straight, extending from posterior angles about one-fourth to one-third distance to anterior margin; most of lateral margin of pronotum lateral to prehumeral carina with slightly thickened setae, the remainder of pronotum with very short, fine appressed setae uniformly distributed. Scutellum transversely carinate, with surface finely, transversely microrugose. Elytra (Fig. 7) slightly wider than posterior margin of pronotum; lateral margins nearly straight, slightly constricted at level of first abdominal sternite, exposing dense white setal patch on first laterotergite, those on second and third laterotergites narrowly visible; basal depression set with slightly elongate patch of thickened setae and white flocculence, similar setae forming narrow longitudinal vitta in line with but separated from basal depression, extending from about level of metacoxa to middle of elytron, and a similar small, rounded spot at about level of third ventrite (this can occasionally be poorly developed or absent); surface imbricately punctate, with short, fine, uniformly distributed setae. Venter with anterior margin of prosternum rounded-truncate medially, not emarginate; prosternal process broad, sides parallel, then slightly widened posterior to procoxal cavities, truncate at apex, clothed with semierect, dense, elongate setae that extend to posterior margin of first abdominal sternite; lateral portions of thorax, most of metacoxa and small lateral spots on abdominal sternites 3 – 5 (can be vague or absent on 5) densely setose and covered with dense white flocculence obscuring surface (Fig. 9); anterior margin of abdominal sternite 2 with medial spot of short, dense yellowish setae that is narrowly divided; laterotergites setose with white setae and flocculence; bare areas of abdominal sternites finely punctate and microrugose, uniformly set with short, inconspicuous setae, some longer setae at apex of sternite 5; marginal groove present on abdominal 5, submarginal apex of sternite 5 medially truncate; pygidium with medial carina not projecting. Legs with metacoxal plate with posterior margin shallowly emarginate with weakly developed medial lobe; femora without ventral denticles; tibiae slender, straight, pro- and mesotibiae with apical mucro-like spine on inner margin; posterior tarsi slightly shorter than tibiae, tarsomere 1 as long as 2 – 4 united; tarsal claws on front legs with inner tooth narrow, nearly as long as claw, middle and hind tarsi with short basal tooth not turned inward. Male genitalia (Fig. 15, 16) strongly arcuate in lateral view, gradually widened posteriorly, then slightly narrowed for short distance; parameres narrowly rounded at apices; aedeagus about twice width of one paramere, margins subparallel, apically triangularly rounded with blunt apex. Length 3.88 – 4.36 mm; width at humeri 0.99 – 1.13 mm. Female (Fig. 8, 10, 12). Differs from male as follows: head with frons golden-bronze, becoming more coppery dorsally, less densely setose than in male; elytra with markings more boldly developed, posterior setose spot always present; prosternum and ventral medial area of thorax without long, semierect setae; legs more reddishcoppery, not greenish; pro- and mesotibiae with apical mucro-like spine on inner margin apparently absent. Length 3.56 – 4.66 mm; width at humeri 0.86 – 1.16 mm.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF98A8606EC7FBB3F6FA107C.taxon	etymology	Etymology. The species epithet, vachellia, is a noun in apposition based on the generic name of the adult host plant.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF98A8606EC7FBB3F6FA107C.taxon	distribution	Distribution. At present, A. vachellia is only known from Cochise County in southeastern Arizona.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF98A8606EC7FBB3F6FA107C.taxon	discussion	Discussion. This species was found to be common at the type locality on Vachellia constricta (Benth.) Seigler & Ebinger (Fabaceae; whitethorn acacia), its adult and presumed larval host. The adults feed on the pollen or petals of the bright yellow flowers, as when the male genitalia were dissected, the contents of the posterior gut was bright yellow.	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
03FB2B70FF98A8606EC7FBB3F6FA107C.taxon	materials_examined	New United States Records The following two species are recorded from the U. S. for the first time. Agrilus barri Hespenheide and Westcott (Fig. 17 – 19). 1 ♀, Arizona: Santa Cruz Co., Nogales, 31.336 ° N, 110.938 ° W, 1190 meters, 11 June 2017, Jason T. Botz, MV / UV lights. This species was described by Hespenheide and Westcott in Hespenheide et al. (2011) based on material from Mexico, primarily Baja California Sur. Additional specimens included in their paper, but not designated as paratypes, were from Sinaloa and Sonora. The authors noted that females usually had a dark greenish to bluish head and pronotum (Hespenheide et al. 2011: fig. 6), there was variation in coloration, and some females were monochromatic, similar to males. I examined numerous paratypes and other specimens cited by Hespenheide et al. (2011) in the FSCA collection and could find no morphological differences between those and the Arizona specimen. The most northern locality for A. barri cited by Hespenheide et al. (2011), 6.5 miles S of Santa Ana, Sonora, Mexico, is only about 100 km south of Nogales, Arizona. I identified as A. barri an additional series of 8 ♂, 6 ♀ from Mexico: Chihuahua, vicinity of Laguna de Encinillas, 1 – 2 July 1987, C. L. Bellamy (CSCA). The male genitalia are identical to those in the paratype series, and although most females are monochromatic, one has a dull greenish pronotum. This represents a new state record for Mexico. Taphrocerus leoni Dugès (Fig. 20 – 24). Arizona: Cochise Co., Huachuca Mountains, upper Miller Canyon Road, 31 ° 25.01 ʹN, 110 ° 16.48 ʹW, 1730 meters, 11 May 2017, N. E. Woodley, sweeping sedges; Cochise Co., Huachuca Mountains, lower Ida Canyon 31 ° 22.77 ʹN, 110 ° 19.82 ʹW, 1815 meters, 24 July 2016, N. E. Woodley, sweeping sedges; Cochise Co., Huachuca Mountains, U. S. Forest Service Road 4759, Scotia Canyon, 31 ° 27.031 ʹN, 110 ° 24.027 ʹW, 1830 meters, 24 April 2020, N. E. Woodley, sweeping sedges; Cochise Co., Hereford, 8920 South Bryerly Court, 31 ° 24.232 ʹN, 110 ° 13.864 ʹW, 1500 meters, 1 – 5 August 2017, S. W. Lingafelter, Malaise trap; Cochise Co., Chiricahua Mountains, East Rucker Canyon Road at road to Red Rock Canyon, 31 ° 45.919 ʹN, 109 ° 19.700 ʹW, 1785 meters, 17 June 2022, N. E. Woodley, sweeping sedges. This species was well characterized by Marek (2021) but was not recorded north of Mexico. It is quite common in the Huachuca and Chiricahua Mountains in southeastern Arizona, especially in the spring before monsoon rains. It co-occurs with T. chevrolati Obenberger and T. sulcifrons Fisher. All three species can be collected from the same patch of sedges at the same time. New State Records The following represent new U. S. state records, with the newly recorded state given in bold. Acmaeodera cazieri Knull. New Mexico: Hidalgo Co., Peloncillo Mountains, Geronimo Trail 0.2 km NE of Arizona border, 31 ° 30.068 ʹN, 109 ° 02.911 ʹW, 1620 meters, 14 August 2020, N. E. Woodley. Acmaeodera solitaria Kerremans. New Mexico: Hidalgo Co., Peloncillo Mountains, Geronimo Trail 2.4 km NE of Arizona border, 31 ° 30.617 ʹN, 109 ° 02.250 ʹW, 1790 meters, 3 August 2022, N. E. Woodley. As far as I am aware, this common summer / early fall-occurring species has been recorded only from southeastern Arizona and western mainland Mexico. However, clearly in error, Chamberlin (1926; as its synonym, A. daggetti Fall) listed it from “ Southern California. ” He did not provide any further information. Unfortunately, Nelson et al. (2008) followed him; however, Bellamy (2008) did not. Surely there is no suitable habitat for this species anywhere near California. Acmaeoderoides stramineus Nelson. Arizona: Yuma Co., East County 19 th Street, 0.9 km W of Highway 195, 32 ° 33.192 ʹN, 114 ° 34.307 ʹW, 65 meters, 27 June 2024, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Tiquilia plicata (Torr.) A. Richards (Boraginaceae). Acmaeoderopsis prosopis Davidson. Arizona: Maricopa Co., Tonopah, West Salome Highway at Baseline Road, 33 ° 22.680 ʹN, 112 ° 46.271 ʹW, 280 meters, 1 May 2021, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Prosopis sp. (Fabaceae). Acmaeoderopsis westcotti (Barr). Arizona: Yuma Co., Yuma, West Wetlands Park, 32 ° 43.797 ʹN, 114 ° 38.004 ʹW, 30 meters, 25 June 2024, S. W. Lingafelter, night beating Prosopis velutina Wooton (Fabaceae). Acmaeoderopsis rockefelleri (Cazier). Arizona: Cochise Co., Foothills Road, 3 miles N of Portal, 31 ° 57 ʹN, 109 ° 08 - 09 ʹW, 1390 meters, 28 May 1981, H. A. Hespenheide; same data but 17 May 1985; Cochise Co., 2 miles ESE of Portal, 31 ° 54 ʹN, 109 ° 06 ʹW, 1370 meters, 28 May 1985, H. A. Hespenheide. Agrilus blandus Horn. Arizona: Mohave Co., unnamed road SW of Nothing, 37.1 km SE of Wikieup off Highway 93, 34 ° 28.600 ʹN, 113 ° 20.630 ʹW, 970 meters, 20 May 2021, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Senegalia greggii (A. Gray) Britton & Rose (Fabaceae). Agrilus cavatus Chevrolat. New Mexico: Hidalgo Co., Peloncillo Mountains, Geronimo Trail 0.2 km NE of Arizona border, 31 ° 30.068 ʹN, 109 ° 02.911 ʹW, 1620 meters, 14 August 2020, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Acaciella angustissima (Mill.) Britton & Rose (Fabaceae). Agrilus cochisei Knull. New Mexico: Hidalgo Co., 30 miles S of Animas, 27 August 1980, N. E. Woodley; Luna Co., Highway 9, 14.6 km E of Columbus, 31 ° 48.734 ʹN, 107 ° 29.383 ʹW, 1215 meters, 14 September 2016, Salvador Vitanza. Agrilus crataegi Frost. Arizona: Coconino Co., Lake Mary Road at Mormon Lake Overlook, 34 ° 57.775 ʹN, 111 ° 26.297 ʹW, 2225 meters, 2 June 2021, N. E. Woodley. Anambodera palmarum (Timberlake). Arizona: Maricopa Co., Highway 88 at Needle Vista View Point, 33 ° 29.738 ʹN, 111 ° 27.829 ʹW, 650 meters, 2 May 2021, N. E. Woodley, on flowers of Eriogonum inflatum Torr. (Polygonaceae); Maricopa Co., Highway 88 at Bulldog Canyon Trail, 33 ° 30.080 ʹN, 111 ° 27.807 ʹW, 640 meters, 21 May 2023, N. E. Woodley, on flowers of E. inflatum; Mohave Co., Rawhide Wash, on Road 15, 6.0 km NW of Alamo Lake, 34 ° 17.717 ʹN, 113 ° 48.450 ʹW, 480 meters, 7 May 2024, N. E. Woodley, on flowering E. inflatum. Chrysobothris atriplexae Fisher. Arizona: Maricopa Co., Tonopah, West Salome Highway at Baseline Road, 33 ° 22.680 ʹN, 112 ° 46.271 ʹW, 280 meters, 1 May 2021, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Atriplex canescens (Pursh) Nutt. (Amaranthaceae). Chrysobothris axillaris Horn. New Mexico: Cibola Co., Cibola National Forest, Mt. Taylor Road 547, 35 ° 13.91 ʹN, 107 ° 42.88 ʹW, 2130 – 2470 meters, 9 – 14 August 2007, E. H. Nearns. Chrysobothris bispinosa Schaeffer. New Mexico: Hidalgo Co., Peloncillo Mountains, Geronimo Trail 2.4 km NE of Arizona border, 31 ° 30.617 ʹN, 109 ° 02.250 ʹW, 1790 meters, 20 June 2024, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Quercus sp. (Fagaceae). Chrysobothris chalcophoroides Horn. New Mexico: Hidalgo Co., Animas Mountains, Gray Ranch, Indian Creek Canyon, 31 ° 36 ʹ 15 ʺN, 108 ° 46 ʹ 26 ʺW, 4829 feet, 25 August 2004, M. Gates. Chrysobothris costifrons costifrons Waterhouse. New Mexico: Grant Co., Gila National Forest, Gomez Peak Picnic Area, 32 ° 50 ʹ 55 ʺN, 108 ° 16 ʹ 32 ʺW, 1957 meters, 15 August 2007, N. E. Woodley, on cut Quercus (Fagaceae). Other Significant Records The following represent records of some rarely collected species and new adult host records indicated in bold. Acmaeodera horni Fall. Arizona: Cochise Co., west slope of Dragoon Mountains, Middlemarch Road, 20.5 km NE of Highway 80, 31 ° 51.568 ʹN, 109 ° 57.534 ʹW, 1710 meters, 30 May 2020, N. E. Woodley, on flowers of Fallugia paradoxa (D. Dond.) Endl. (Rosaceae). Other specimens from same locality, 1 June 2020, 12 May 2021, 14 May 2021, 4 May 2022, 10 May 2022, 16 May 2022, 24 May 2022, 30 May 2022. New adult host record. This species was known only from the holotype until an additional specimen was discovered in UAIC from the Santa Catalina Mountains in Arizona, which led Westcott and Bellamy (2004) to collect eight additional specimens. The specimens they collected were on or near two species of Quercus. All the specimens I have collected were on flowers of Fallugia paradoxa. I observed some individuals feeding on the petals of the flowers of this plant. Agrilus falli Fisher. Arizona: Santa Cruz Co., Patagonia Mountains, Duquesne Road 18.0 km N of Highway 82, 31 ° 23.267 ʹN, 110 ° 43.067 ʹW, 1770 meters, 28 August 2022, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Dalea albiflora A. Gray (Fabaceae). New adult host record. Mastogenius puncticollis Schaeffer. Arizona: Cochise Co., Chiricahua Mountains, Forest Road 42 at crossing of East Turkey Creek, 31 ° 54.550 ʹN, 109 ° 15.115 ʹW, 1960 meters, 10 June 2020, N. E. Woodley; Cochise Co., Chiricahua Mountains, John Hands Campground, 31 ° 52.706 ʹN, 109 ° 13.379 ʹW, 1715 meters, 12 June 2024, N. E. Woodley, beating dead twigs of Quercus sp. (Fagaceae); Cochise Co., Huachuca Mountains, Carr Canyon Road just below Carr House, 31 ° 26.574 ʹN, 110 ° 17.190 ʹW, 1660 meters, 2 June 2022, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Quercus hypoleucoides A. Camus (Fagaceae); Cochise Co., Huachuca Mountains, Miller Canyon Trail just SW of Beatty’s Guest Ranch, 31 ° 24.801 ʹN, 110 ° 16.739 ʹW, 1790 meters, 6 June 2022, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Q. hypoleucoides; Cochise Co., Huachuca Mountains, Carr Canyon Road 9.5 km from Highway 92, 31 ° 25.797 ʹN, 110 ° 16.984 ʹW, 2160 meters, 14 June 2022, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Q. hypoleucoides; Cochise Co., Huachuca Mountains, upper Carr Canyon Road, Reef Townsite Campground, 31 ° 25.689 ʹN, 110 ° 17.441 ʹW, 2195 meters, 7 July 2022, N. E. Woodley, sweeping Q. hypoleucoides. In addition to the holotype, there have been only two additional specimens of M. puncticollis recorded (Walters and Bellamy 1990, Bellamy 2002). I have collected 26 specimens from the above localities, mostly by sweeping Quercus hypoleucoides, new adult host record. The species seems to be mostly associated with dead twigs of that oak species. However, the series noted above from John Hands Campground was collected on Quercus that was not Q. hypoleucoides, so additional oak species probably serve as larval hosts	en	Woodley, Norman E. (2024): Two new species of Agrilus Curtis from Arizona with some new distributional and host records of buprestids from the southwest USA (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Insecta Mundi 2024 (75): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.14662542
