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Trypetimorpha

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Trypetimorpha
Trypetimorpha occidentalis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hemiptera
Suborder: Auchenorrhyncha
Infraorder: Fulgoromorpha
Family: Tropiduchidae
Subfamily: Tropiduchinae
Tribe: Trypetimorphini
Genus: Trypetimorpha
Costa, 1862
Synonyms

Trichoduchus Bierman, 1910

Trypetimorpha[1] is a genus of bugs in the family Tropiduchidae; species are recorded from mainland Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia.[2]

Taxonomy

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The genus was first described in 1862 by Achille Costa.[1][3]

Trypetimorpha is the type genus of the small tribe Trypetimorphini (erected by Leopold Melichar in 1914). The other extant genus in this tribe is Ommatissus and the extinct genus †Reteotissus Szwedo, 2019 was found from Eocene strata in the Isle of Wight, off southern England.[4]

Species

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Fulgoromorpha Lists on the Web[2] includes:

  1. Trypetimorpha aschei Huang & Bourgoin, 1993
  2. Trypetimorpha biermani (Dammerman, 1910)
  3. Trypetimorpha canopus Linnavuori, 1973
  4. Trypetimorpha fenestrata Costa, 1862 - type species (mainland Europe, north Africa and the Middle East)
  5. Trypetimorpha japonica Ishihara, 1954
  6. Trypetimorpha occidentalis Huang & Bourgoin, 1993
  7. Trypetimorpha sizhengi Huang & Bourgoin, 1993
  8. Trypetimorpha wilsoni Huang & Bourgoin, 1993

References

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  1. ^ a b Costa, A. (1862). "Di un nuova genere di Emitteri Omotteri genere Trypetimorpha, nob". Annuario del Museo Zoologico della Università di Napoli. (in Italian). 1: 60–65. Wikidata Q123520975.
  2. ^ a b Fulgoromorpha Lists On the Web (FLOW): Trypetimorpha Costa, 1862 (retrieved 9 February 2022)
  3. ^ Murray J. Fletcher (2011-05-12). "Genus Trypetimorpha Costa, 1862". Australian Faunal Directory. Australian Government. Retrieved 2023-11-23.
  4. ^ Jacek SZWEDO; Jowita DROHOJOWSKA; Yuri A. POPOV; Ewa SIMON; Piotr WEGIEREK (9 August 2019). "Aphids, true hoppers, jumping plant-lice, scale insects, true bugs and whiteflies (Insecta: Hemiptera) from the Insect Limestone (latest Eocene) of the Isle of Wight, UK" (PDF). Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. 110 (3–4): 1-66 [27]. doi:10.1017/S175569101900001X. ISSN 1755-6910. Wikidata Q99647410.
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