Miroceramia

The eggs can be distinguished from those of related species by their strong longitudinal curvature, whereby the capsule dorsal convex and ventrally concave.

According to a note from M. J. D. Brendell on the label of a male he collected in the Manusela National Park on Seram Island, which is deposited in the Natural History Museum, London, these animals are capable of stridulation using their wings.

[2] The few representatives of the species found so far come from the area of the Wallace line, more precisely from the Moluccas island Seram and from the north of Sulawesi.

An adult female is deposited as a holotype in the zoological collection of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History.

Since he synonymized the species, but the genus remained valid, the newly combined name Miroceramia westwoodii resulted.

[4] Due to the clear differences between Miroceramia westwoodii and almost all other Obriminae, Oliver Zompro established the tribe Miroceramiini for this species in 2004.

[5] After their adult wingless Imago became known and after a closer comparison of their morphology, Mearnsiana bullosa was included in the Tribus Obrimini convicted.

As a result, the tribe Miroceramiini initially became monotypical, before it was made a synonym for the Obrimini in 2021 after the publication of genetic studies.