chrysina

Chrysina lecontei, Arizona. Jewel scarabs emerge during Arizona's summer monsoon, and collectors from around the world descend on the region with their blacklights and mercury vapor lamps to attract the beetles. Chrysina lecontei is the smallest and rarest of the three Arizona species. Chrysina leconte, Arizona. photo details (both photos): Canon 100mm f2.8 macro lens on a Canon EOS 20D ISO 100, 1/250 sec, f/18, indirect strobe in white box
Chrysina beyeri - Beyer's Scarab - Arizona Arizona's Jewel Scarabs emerge after the onset of summer rains. These large insects have something of a cult following among collectors, and enthusiasts from around the world descend on the Sonoran desert every monsoon season with their mercury vapor lamps and blacklights to entice the lumbering beetles into their traps.  The effects of this mass harvesting on Chrysina populations have not been studied, but they should be.  I'd hate to lose such an attractive species. Beyer's scarab, the largest Chrysina in the United States, feeds on oak foliage…