- Source: Typhlocybinae
Typhlocybinae is a subfamily of insects in the leafhopper family, Cicadellidae. This is currently the second largest leafhopper subfamily based on the number of described species, but researchers believe there are so many taxa yet undescribed that it is probably the largest subfamily. Approximately 6000 species have been described thus far.
Typhlocybinae belongs to the second-largest subfamily of leafhoppers, with >6,000 described extant species placed in ~300 genera and five tribes.[1]
Many species of the subfamily Typhlocybinae are major pests of crops, such as cotton, grape, and eggplant, by direct or indirect damage (Oman, 1949, Vidano, 1962, Nielson, 1968, Zhang, 1990, Qin and Zhang, 2008).
Tribes
Entomologists divide the subfamily into four to ten tribes. Five tribes are generally accepted:
Alebrini
Dikraneurini
Empoascini
Erythroneurini
Typhlocybini
Selected genera
Alebra
Dikrella
Dziwneono
Empoasca
Erasmoneura Young, 1952
Eupteryx
Jacobiasca
Sweta Viraktamath & Dietrich, 2011
Typhlocyba
Gallery
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Dikraneurini
- Dikrella
- Empoasca
- Typhlocybinae
- Leafhopper
- Jacobiasca formosana
- Hemiptera
- Shweta
- Empoasca
- Aaka
- Dziwneono
- Irena Dworakowska
- Alebra