As an ambrosia beetle,
T. lineatum has evolved an obligate, mutualistic relationship with fungi, which is central to its life history. The beetle larvae are entirely dependent on cultivated fungi, which metabolize wood and provide nutrients, steroids, and vitamins. The primary nutritional mutualist is the fungus
Phialophoropsis ferruginea, whose spores are transported by the beetles in specialized structures and are inoculated into the wood of host trees, creating a sustainable food source for larvae development. In return, they develop specialized structures called mycangia to provide nutrition to fungi. The annual cycle of
T. lineatum is marked by two distinct dispersal flights, though the most characteristic thing is the spectacular springtime "swarming flight". This mass emergence occurs as the temperatures rise above 16 °C. Daily flight starts in late morning, reaching a peak by mid-afternoon, and the numbers reduced sharply in late afternoon. These new brood beetles, having overwintered, are attracted to suitable host logs by odour. The primary attractant is ethanol, which accumulates to high concentrations in dead or dying trees. Upon locating a host, female pioneers initiate galleries into the sapwood, and the accumulating white frass on the bark is often the first visible sign of infestation for forestry workers. Colonization is rapidly amplified by a female-produced aggregation pheromone,
lineatin. This pheromone attracts both males and females into the log, leading to mating on its surface. The male then follows the female into the gallery, where his role of removing boring dust can increase reproductive success. And pair female will produce eggs nearly as twice as many as unpaired females', and the eggs will be laied in individual niches sealed with boring dust. Upon hatching, the larvae will feed on the wood fibers and on the hyphae of the ambrosia fungi incoculated by the parents. Following development, the new brood adults emerge sporadically throughout the summer. Their initial dispersal flight is strongly photopositive, carrying them up and away from the log. They are then passively transported downwind, often over distances of 300 meters or more, into forested margins. Here, they settle in the forest floor or at the base of stumps to overwinter. This late-summer flight is less noticeable than the spring swarm. All new brood beetles must overwinter to reach sexual maturity, after which they will join the swarming flight the following spring to begin a new cycle. ==Economic and ecological importance==