Food habits
''Timarcha lugens'' is strictly monophagous on ''Life cycle
The life cycle of ''T. lugens'' is completed in two years. Adults start their activity soon after snowmelt and are active until the beginning of autumn (end of September in the Sierra Nevada). Most adults that are active at the beginning of the season are the individuals that emerged the preceding year and have survived the winter in diapause. Mating and egg laying occur along the whole period of adult activity. At the end of the summer, approximately 15 days to one month before the snow has completely covered the study area, individuals start overwintering under large plants or stones. Overwintering is common in species of ''Timarcha'', as well as other chrysomelids, and it occurs in most high mountain species, which are active only during the warmest period of the year. The short periods of activity (usually restricted to summertime) limits the breeding season to a few months in which these species have to maturate reproductive organs, mate, breed, and develop. Although adults lay eggs during the whole summer, larval activity is restricted to a short period (early to late June) after snowmelt. This restricted period of activity of larvae seem to indicate that eggs go through an obligatory diapause, hatching the following year. When larvae have completed their development, they bury themselves into the soil under a plant and excavate a chamber for pupation. Approximately a month after larval activity has finished and pupation started, new adults emerge in the population, suggesting that pupation is completed in less than a month. In addition, some pupae might go through a period of hibernation.Conservation
''Timarcha lugens'' is nowadays one of the most conspicuous endemic beetles of the high mountains of the Sierra Nevada. The conservation strategies to preserve the biodiversity of this high-mountain habitat are effective only if they are based on broad and accurate scientific knowledge. ''T. lugens'' is a singular organism in being monophagous on a common mountain cruciferous, and functioning as a keystone species in this community. Furthermore, ''T. lugens'' is an endemic species of a unique ecosystem within one of the world's biodiversity hot spots. However, due to several characteristics of its ecology and the management practices currently conducted in the Sierra Nevada, the short- and long-term conservation of this chrysomelid is threatened. First, ''T. lugens'' is monophagous on the shrub ''H. spinosa''. Unfortunately, the broad use of the high mountains to develop ski facilities leads to the removal of almost every plant taller than . This results in the total elimination of the ''H. spinosa'' shrubs in those places where the ski runs are arranged. Furthermore, ''T. lugens'' is distributed only above altitude, the part of the Sierra Nevada where ski is most intensely practiced. An aggressive development of ski will surely provoke a strong decrease in the abundance of ''H. spinosa'' and, therefore, in the abundance of ''T. lugens''. Second, sinceReferences
González- Megías, A., J.M. Gómez & F. Sánchez-Piñero 2005. Consequences of spatial autocorrelation for the analysis of metapopulation ecology. Ecology 86:3264-3271. González- Megías, A., J.M. Gómez & F. Sánchez-Piñero 2005. Regional dynamics of a patchily distributed herbivore along an altitudinal gradient. Ecological Entomology 30: 1-8. González-Megias, A., Gómez, J.M. & Sánchez-Piñero, F. 2004. Ecology of the high mountain chrysomelid ''Timarcha lugens'' Rosenhauer (Chrysomelidae). In: Jolivet, P.; Santiago-Blay, J.A. & Schmitt, M. (eds.) New developments in the biology of Chrysomelidae, págs. 553-563. SPB Academic Publishing, La Haya, The Netherland. González-Megias, A. & Gómez, J.M. 2003. Consequences of removing a keystone herbivore for the abundance and diversity of arthropods associated with a cruciferous shrub. Ecological Entomology 28:299-308. Gómez, J.M. & González-Megías, A. 2002. Asymmetrical interactions between ungulates and phytophagous insects: being different matters. Ecology 83:203-211. González-Megías, A. & Gómez, J.M. 2001. Adult and larval plant range and preference in ''Timarcha lugens'' (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae): strict monophagy on an atypical host. Annals of the Entomological Society of America 94:110-115.External links