“…Generally, cossonine weevils prefer dead and decomposing plant tissue, usually boring and scarring recently felled trees (Jordal 2014;Pierce 1918); some, such as Caulophilus Wollaston (Kuschel 1962;Pierce 1918) and Dynatopechus Marshall (Zimmerman and Anderson 1949), are serious pests of grains and beans, respectively. Some cossonines in Dryotribini, Neumatorini, Onycholipini, and Pentarthrini are endogean, dwelling deep in soil and humus (Morrone and Hlavac 2017), while others in Rhyncolini, Proecini, and some Onycholipini create complex galleries in wood involving adult and larval tunnels and egg-niches, similar to those created by scolytine bark and platypodine ambrosia beetles (Kuschel 1966;Osella 1982;Kato 1998;Mecke and Galileo 2004;Jordal 2014). Finally, the newly transferred Phylloplatypus Kato (Kuschel et al 2000;Jordal et al 2011) feeds on and mines the living leaf tissue between the veins of Pandanus Parkinson and are able to transmit fungal pathogens from infected to uninfected leaves (Sugiura and Masuya 2010), the spores of which may be carried by the adult in mycangia located on the forecoxae (Morimoto and Kojima 2004).…”