Search results for "Hemiptera"

showing 10 items of 186 documents

The Afrotropical genus Rhinolaetia Schouteden, 1965 and its systematic position within Scutelleridae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera)

2016

The monotypic Afrotropical genus Rhinolaetia Schouteden, 1865 (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Scutelleridae) is redescribed. The head, wings, female genitalia and habitus of Rhinolaetia overlaeti Schouteden, 1965 are illustrated. Morphological features of Rhinolaetia and selected representatives of six scutellerid subfamilies are listed and compared. The systematic position of this genus is briefly discussed. Close affinity of Rhinolaetia overlaeti with representatives of subfamilies Odontotarsinae and Odontoscelinae is observed.

OdontoscelinaeZoologyScutelleridaeHeteropteraHemipteraAfrotropical RegiontaxonomySpecies SpecificityScutelleridaeOdontotarsinaeBotanymorphologyAnimalsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsRhinolaetiabiologyPentatomoideaHeteropteraBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationHemipteraclassificationAfricaAnimal Science and ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)FemalePentatomoideaZootaxa : A mega-journal for zoological taxonomists in the world
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<strong>Identification of the nymphal stages of two European seed bugs, <em>L. equestris</em> and <em>L. simulans</em> …

2013

The genus Lygaeus Fabricius, 1794 includes more than fifty species, mainly distributed in the Old World regions, with 17 species known from the Palearctic (Pericart 2001; Wachmann et al. 2007), and only two from Central Europe, i.e., L . equestris (Linnaeus, 1758) and L . simulans Deckert, 1985 (Pericart 2001).

Old WorldDna barcodesGenusBotanyHeteropteraAnimal Science and ZoologyIdentification (biology)Biologybiology.organism_classificationLygaeidaeHemipteraEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsZootaxa
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First North American Record of the Old World CylapineFulvius subnitensPoppius (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Miridae) from Virginia, with Descriptions and …

2011

Abstract. The first North American record for Fulvius subnitens Poppius is reported based on one specimen collected in southcentral Virginia. Fulvius anthocoroides (Reuter), Fulvius imbecilis (Say), Fulvius slateri Wheeler, and Fulvius subnitens are diagnosed and described, and color images of adults, updated distributions, a review of feeding habits, and an identification key are provided. For each species, the nomenclatural history and most important citations are given.

Old WorldbiologyEcologyHeteropteraFulvius subnitensZoologyIdentification keyFulvius slateribiology.organism_classificationHemipteraMiridaeInsect ScienceKey (lock)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsProceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington
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A molecular study of Neophyllaphis varicolor (Hemiptera, Aphididae) in Costa Rica

2019

The genus Neophyllaphis (Takahashi) (Aphididae: Neophyllaphidinae) is composed of 18 species; however, in the Americas only nine species have been reported previously. A new species, Neophyllaphis varicolor Miller & Halbert, was described in 2014 in USA. Colonies resembling those of this new species have been observed in Costa Rica on Podocarpus spp. In order to determine if N. varicolor is also present in Costa Rica, we sampled Neophyllaphis colonies from Podocarpus falcatus and P. chinensis. Additionally, we sampled individuals from Podocarpus sp. in Spain and Vietnam. DNA of each sample was extracted and used to amplify and sequence the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) and elongation…

PodocarpusInsectaArthropodaZoologyBiologyDNA barcodingPodocarpusHemipteraAphididaeGenuslcsh:ZoologyAnimaliaCytochrome c oxidase subunit IDNA barcodinglcsh:QL1-991integrative taxonomyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNeophyllaphidinaeElongation factor IPhylogenetic analysisPhylogenetic treephylogenetic analysisCytochrome c oxidase subunit IAphididaecytochrome c oxidase subunit Ibiology.organism_classificationHemipteraAphidsAphidoideaIntegrative taxonomyAnimal Science and Zoologyelongation factor IZooKeys
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Biology and behavior of Metaphycus angustifrons Compere (Hymenoptera: Encyrtidae), a newly discovered parasitoid of soft scale insects (Hemiptera: Co…

2011

Abstract Metaphycus angustifrons Compere has recently been found to be the most abundant parasitoid of brown soft scale, Coccus hesperidum L., in southern California. In laboratory experiments we examined several biological parameters of this species. M. angustifrons both oviposits and host feeds in brown soft scale and is a facultatively gregarious endoparasitoid of this soft scale insect. In contrast with other Metaphycus spp., M. angustifrons is a koinobiont parasitoid, allowing its host to grow up to 40% beyond its size at parasitism. Despite its high abundance on brown soft scale in the field, in the laboratory, high rates of parasitoid egg encapsulation are observed; about half of par…

Scale insectbiologyEcologyfungiParasitismHymenopterabiology.organism_classificationHemipteraParasitoidEncyrtidaeInsect ScienceCoccus hesperidumAgronomy and Crop ScienceCoccidaeBiological Control
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Review and a New Subfamily Placement of the Plant Bug GenusIsometocorisCarvalho and Sailer, 1954 (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Miridae), with the Descript…

2015

Abstract The genus Isometocoris Carvalho and Sailer is reviewed and I. penicillus, new species, from Brazil is described. Diagnoses of the genus and included species I. blantoni Carvalho and Sailer and I. penicillus, n. sp., are given; a color adult habitus photo of both Isometocoris species, male genitalic drawings of Isometocoris penicillus n. sp., and scanning electron micrographs of selected structures of I. blantoni are provided; and an identification key is given to help distinguish the two included species. Isometocoris is transferred from the subfamily Psallopinae to the Cylapinae, where it is placed in the tribe Fulviini. Psallopinae is reduced to tribal level (Psallopini, new stat…

SubfamilybiologyCylapinaeHeteropteraIdentification keyZoologybiology.organism_classificationMiridaeHemipteraInsect ScienceBotanyPenicillusTaxonomy (biology)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsProceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington
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Fossil representatives of the family Greenideidae (Hemiptera, Aphidoidea) from the Miocene of Europe

2002

Abstract Four new aphid species (Hemiptera, Aphidoidea, Greenideidae) are described on the basis of imprints in oil-shales from the Miocene of Europe (Rubielos de Mora, Spain; Vishnevaya Balka 〚Stavropol〛, Russia): Eutrichosiphum europaeum nov. sp., Greenidea hispanica nov. sp., Greenideoida (Pentatrichosiphum) turolensis nov. sp. and Mollitrichosiphum rubusensis nov. sp. All the taxa are placed within recent genera of the subfamily Greenideinae. Miocene representatives of this subfamily have been found in the south of Europe. Later changes of climatic conditions limited its geographic range to south-eastern Asia, where it is now represented by over 130 species of seven genera.

SubfamilybiologyEcologyMandibulataPaleontologyBiostratigraphybiology.organism_classificationNeogeneHemipteraTaxonSpace and Planetary ScienceBotanyPhanerozoicCenozoicGeobios
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<p><strong>Description and DNA barcoding of <em>Ochetostethomorpha</em> <em>secunda</em>, a new species of the So…

2014

Ochetostethomorpha secunda sp. nov. from Namibia, the second species of the South African endemic genus is described, illustrated, and compared with O. nollothensis Schumacher, 1913. The new species is the third of the subfamily Sehirinae known from Namibia. Moreover, a DNA barcode sequence was generated for this new species (827 bp of cytochrome oxidase I) and was deposited in GenBank.

SubfamilybiologyGenBankHeteropteraBotanyAnimal Science and ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)biology.organism_classificationCydnidaeDNA barcodingHemipteraEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOchetostethomorpha secundaZootaxa
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Pretarsal structures in the family Parastrachiidae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Pentatomoidea)

2010

Parastrachiidae, for a long time regarded as a subfamily within the Cydnidae (e.g., Schaefer et al. 1988; Schuh and Slater 1995; Gapud 1991), was raised to family level by Sweet and Schaefer (2002), and this position was then accepted by many heteropterists (e.g., Lis and Heyna 2001; Lis and Schaefer 2005; Hironaka et al. 2007; Schaefer and Kikuhara 2007; Lis 2010).

SubfamilybiologyPentatomoideaEvolutionary biologyHeteropteraAnimal Science and ZoologyBiodiversityCydnidaebiology.organism_classificationHemipteraEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTaxonomyZootaxa
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Sympatric diversification vs. immigration: deciphering host-plant specialization in a polyphagous insect, the stolbur phytoplasma vector Hyalesthes o…

2012

The epidemiology of vector transmitted plant diseases is highly influenced by dispersal and the host-plant range of the vector. Widening the vector's host range may increase transmission potential, whereas specialization may induce specific disease cycles. The process leading to a vector's host shift and its epidemiological outcome is therefore embedded in the frameworks of sympatric evolution vs. immigration of preadapted populations. In this study, we analyse whether a host shift of the stolbur phytoplasma vector, Hyalesthes obsoletus from field bindweed to stinging nettle in its northern distribution range evolved sympatrically or by immigration. The exploitation of stinging nettle has l…

SympatryPhytoplasmaPopulationZoologyHemipteraGeneticsAnimalseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyPlant Diseaseseducation.field_of_studyGenetic diversitybiologyEcologyHost (biology)Genetic VariationUrtica dioicaCixiidaebiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionSympatrySympatric speciationVector (epidemiology)Host-Pathogen InteractionsBiological dispersalMicrosatellite RepeatsMolecular ecology
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