Red-legged Buprestis vs Spangle Gall Wasp
Side-by-side species comparison
| Attribute | Red-legged Buprestis | Spangle Gall Wasp |
|---|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Buprestis rufipes | Neuroterus quercusbaccarum |
| Order | Coleoptera | Hymenoptera |
| Family | Buprestidae | Cynipidae |
| Size | 18-28 mm | 1.5–2.5 mm |
| Habitat | Woodlands | Woodlands |
| Diet | Wood Feeders | Herbivores |
| Regions | Europe | Europe |
| Conservation | Near Threatened | Not Evaluated |
Red-legged Buprestis
A large metallic green European jewel beetle with distinctive red legs. Adults bask on sun-warmed timber and tree trunks.
Did You Know?
Adults have been recorded emerging from timber in buildings decades after the wood was installed.
Spangle Gall Wasp
A tiny gall wasp that produces flat, disc-shaped spangle galls on the undersides of oak leaves. It alternates between two distinct gall forms across generations.
Did You Know?
A single oak leaf may carry over a hundred spangle galls, yet the tree suffers minimal harm.