The generic name Oxynopterus means "sharp-wing" in ancient Greek; while the specific namemucronatus is Latin for "pointed". Both refer to the sharp, pointed tips of the elytra.[6]
Description
O. mucronatus, like other members of the genus Oxynopterus, are among the largest of the click beetles.[7][8] The males have distinctive feather-like antennae, with long flat lamellae extending from the antenna segments. The females in contrast, have thin toothed antennae and are larger than the males. The prothorax is shield-shaped, with sharply pointed posteriolateral tips. The elytra are long and smooth, tapering to a sharp point. The claws are simple, without bristles (setae), pads, or lobes on the tarsal segments. They are predominantly reddish-brown in life.[4][6]
^ abKalshoven, L.G.E. (1955). "Additional note on the giant Elaterid, Oxynopterus mucronatus Ol., a predator on termites in Java". Entomologische Berichten. 1 (1): 273–278.
^Lamarck, Jean-Baptiste; Bruguière, Jean Guillaume; Olivier, Guillaume-Antoine; Haüy, René Just; Pelletier, Bertrand (1792). Journal d'Histoire Naturelle. Imprimerie du Cercle-Social. p. 262.