Sybra chaffanjoni is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Breuning in 1969. The diverse genus Sybra comprises over 400 species and subspecies, predominantly found in the Oriental and eastern Palearctic regions.
Sybra chaffanjoni was originally described by the Austrian entomologist, Stephan Breuning, in 1969 as part of a systematic review of cerambycid beetles from museum collections. The species was formally named and characterized in a French-language publication titled "Nouveaux coléoptères Cerambycidae des collections du Muséum de Paris," appearing in the Bulletin du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris série 2, 41(3): 655âÂÂ670, with a specific description on page 656.
Sybra chaffanjoni belongs to the kingdom Animalia, phylum Arthropoda, class Insecta, order Coleoptera, family Cerambycidae, subfamily Lamiinae, tribe Apomecynini, genus Sybra (subgenus Sybra), and species chaffanjoni. The family Cerambycidae is commonly known as the longhorn beetle, comprising over 35,000 species worldwide, characterized by their long, cylindrical bodies and antennae that are as long or longer than the body. Within this family, the subfamily Lamiinae, or flat-faced longhorns, is the largest, at nearly 21,000 species in over 3,000 genera, distinguished by their relatively flat frons and diverse body forms adapted to various wood-boring lifestyles. The tribe Apomecynini hosts around 1,900 species, featuring small to medium-sized beetles with slender, elongated bodies, many of which are wingless and exhibit dense pubescence for camouflage on bark or foliage.
Sybra chaffanjoni is endemic to southern China, with its known distribution restricted to Guizhou Province. The type locality is recorded as "Chine, Kouy-Tschéou," an older name for the region now named Guizhou. This species was described based on specimens collected in this area, with subsequent catalogues confirming Guizhou as the sole locality for verified records. Scarce data on Sybra chaffanjoni suggest it may be rare or that sampling efforts have been insufficient to document further occurrences. The species is known exclusively from a limited number of museum specimens associated with its original description in 1969, with no additional collection records or sightings reported in literature since then.
Based on its type locality in Guizhou Province, Sybra chaffanjoni is believed to inhabit the region's subtropical forests and karst landscapes, which feature humid, mountainous terrain with high biodiversity and complex topography. However, specific preferences for this species remain undocumented. The larvae frequently bore into decayed wood, consistent with the habits of the Apomecynini tribe, though no specific hosts have been confirmed. Guizhou has experienced historical deforestation and ongoing land-use changes that threaten forest habitats generally, which may affect Sybra chaffanjoni, but the effects on this species are unknown.