Oxycoryninae are subfamily of primitive weevils of the familyBelidae, but sometimes treated as a distinct family Oxycorynidae. Like in other belids, their antennae are straight, not elbowed as in the true weevils, and their larvae feed on the wood of diseased or dying plants or on deadwood or fruits; they tend to avoid healthy plants. The Oxycoryninae contain a mere 13 living genera altogether, more than half of which are in the tribeOxycorynini. Of the three tribes recognized here, two are very small but one of these, the Aglycyderini, are often treated as a distinct subfamily. However, they share several traits with other Oxycoryninae, especially with the Metrioxenini. The fossil record shows that the three tribes were well distinct by the mid-Paleogene, about. The belids as a whole are of Jurassicorigin, and the Oxycoryninae must thus date from the Late Jurassic or at most Early Cretaceous, roughly some. Oxycoryninae, as defined by Pascoe in 1870, refers to what today is the tribe Oxycorynini. Oxycorynidae, as defined by Kolbe in 1908, also refers to the Oxycorynini.
Description
Except in the Aglycyderini, the rostrum of adult Oxycoryninae is located high on the head and the underside of the head is very much rounded; this can be appreciated in profile. The second funicle segment is not longer than the first and may be shorter. The mesothoracalsternite is flattened but between the second leg pair there is a protrusion projecting at an angle of about 45°. The procoxa has no visible sutureexceptthe hole through which the trochantertip can be seen. The first tarsal segment is tiny and hardly visible. In the larvae, the antennae are reduced to a single segment, which bears the sensorium on a little knob. The apical segment of the maxillary palpus carries no setae, and the labium has no strut. The spiracles have soft walls without sclerotized rings.
Notable genera
Aglycyderes - occurs more than away from its closest living relatives.