occurrenceID	taxonID	catalogNumber	collectionCode	institutionCode	typeStatus	verbatimLabel	sex	individualCount	eventDate	recordedBy	recordNumber	decimalLatitude	decimalLongitude	minimumElevationInMeters	maximumElevationInMeters	minimumDepthInMeters	maximumDepthInMeters	country	stateProvince	municipality	locality	references	associatedOccurrences	associatedReferences	associatedSequences	basisOfRecord
038C03218F1FFFF5FCB0FBEAAA19F87C.mc.3B4DB86A8F1DFFF5FBC9FB28AD23FB25	038C03218F1FFFF5FCB0FBEAAA19F87C.taxon			IIAV, IEXA		Ten third-instar larvae as part of a large sample of larvae reared to adult stage, collected in Bolivia, Santa Cruz, Warnes, La Jupia, 308 m, 10 - VII- 2011, F. Copa Bazán (IIAV, IEXA)		1	2011-07-10	La Jupia & F. Copa Bazan				308				Bolivia	Santa Cruz	Warnes	La Jupia	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038C03218F1FFFF5FCB0FBEAAA19F87C#3B4DB86A8F1DFFF5FBC9FB28AD23FB25				MaterialCitation
038C03218F1FFFF5FCB0FBEAAA19F87C.mc.3B4DB86A8F1DFFF5FC91F939AA1CF87C	038C03218F1FFFF5FCB0FBEAAA19F87C.taxon				holotype	Probably, the very large numbers of larvae observed in the sugarcane fields of Santa Cruz, Bolivia during 2011 (150 – 200 larvae / m 2) represent the unusual growth of populations of white grubs derived from some combination of facts, such as, scarce local rains, frequent fires in grasslands and sugarcane fields, use of compost as fertilizer, deforestation of surrounding lands and abuse of insecticides applied to soil during many years (Copa-Bazan and Morón, 2014). The most interesting observation is that this species known for near a century from the holotype, unexpectedly appears in thousands in an agricultural landscape	larva	200										Bolivia	Santa Cruz		Probably	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038C03218F1FFFF5FCB0FBEAAA19F87C#3B4DB86A8F1DFFF5FC91F939AA1CF87C				MaterialCitation
