Hilgardia
Hilgardia
Hilgardia
University of California
Hilgardia

Characters, distribution, and food plants of leafhopper species in Thamnotettix group

Authors

Dwight M. DeLong
Henry H. P. Severin

Authors Affiliations

Dwight M. DeLong was Professor of Entomology, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. R. V. Hershberger, Ohio State University, assisted with the illustrations; Henry H. P. Severin was Entomologist in the Experiment Station.

Publication Information

Hilgardia 18(4):185-199. DOI:10.3733/hilg.v18n04p185. April 1948.

PDF of full article, Cite this article

Abstract

Abstract does not appear. First page follows.

Introduction

Some years ago three species (Severin, 1929), (1934)4 and a biological race (Severin, 1940) of one of these leafhopper species were reported to transmit the California aster-yellows virus. Recently, (DeLong and Severin (1945), (1946), (1947a), (1947b) recorded thirteen additional leafhopper vectors of the virus. The present paper deals with the characters, distribution, and food plants of eight more leafhopper vectors, two of which have been previously mentioned in the literature (Severin, 1934). In a companion paper (Severin (1948)) discusses the transmission of the virus by these eight leafhopper species.

The genus Thamnotettix was erected by (Zetterstedt (1840)) to include European species, and Cicada prasina Fallen was designated as the type. The early American workers placed a large number of American species in this genus as they were described. In recent years several new genera have been described to include certain groups of closely related American species formerly in the genus Thamnotettix. The species treated in the present paper have been placed in three genera described by (Ball (1936)). These are Idiodonus, Colladonus, and Friscananus. There is little doubt that these species in the three genera are closely related; they may belong to a single genus. The color patterns will usually distinguish them, but the genital structures are similar in both the males and the females of the species concerned. The females usually bear a median sunken spatulate process on the last ventral segment which varies in width, length, and the degree of production beyond the posterior margin in different species. The males may be distinguished by the shape of the style and the length and position of the spine on each side of the caudal margin of the pygofer.

Idiodonus Heidemanni (Ball)

Idiodonus heidemanni (Ball) is blunt-headed and has a general color of grayish green, sprinkled with minute red spots. It is 4 mm long.

The vertex (fig. 1, A) is broad, bluntly produced, and about twice as wide at the base between the eyes as the median length.

Literature Cited

Ball E. D. Additions to the western Jassid fauna. Canad. Ent. 1900. 32:337-47. DOI: 10.4039/Ent32337-11 [CrossRef]

Ball E. D. Some new genera of leafhoppers related to Thamnotettix. Brooklyn Ent. Soc. Bul. 1936. 31:57-60.

DeLong D. M., Severin H. H. P. Characters, distribution, and food plants of phlepsid leafhopper vectors of California aster-yellows virus. Hilgardia. 1945. 17(1):1-20. DOI: 10.3733/hilg.v17n01p001 [CrossRef]

DeLong D. M., Severin H. H. P. Taxonomy, distribution, and food plants of Gyponana hasta, a leafhopper vector of California aster-yellows virus. Hilgardia. 1946. 17(3):155-63. DOI: 10.3733/hilg.v17n03p155 [CrossRef]

DeLong D. M., Severin H. H. P. Characters, distribution, and food plants of newly discovered leafhopper vectors of California aster-yellows virus. Hilgardia. 1947a. 17(16):525-38. DOI: 10.3733/hilg.v17n16p525 [CrossRef]

DeLong D. M., Severin H. H. P. Taxonomy, distribution, and food plants of Acinopterus angulatus. Hilgardia. 1947b. 17(5):211-15. DOI: 10.3733/hilg.v17n05p211 [CrossRef]

Severin H. H. P. Yellows disease of celery, lettuce, and other plants transmitted by Cicadula sexnotata (Fall). Hilgardia. 1929. 3(18):543-83. DOI: 10.3733/hilg.v03n18p543 [CrossRef]

Severin H. H. P. Transmission of California aster and celery-yellows virus by three species of leafhoppers. Hilgardia. 1934. 8(10):339-61. DOI: 10.3733/hilg.v08n10p337 [CrossRef]

Severin H. H. P. Potato naturally infected with California aster-yellows virus. Phytopathology. 1940. 30(12):1049-51.

Severin H. H. P. Infection of perennial delphinums by California-aster-yellows virus. Hilgardia. 1942. 14(8):411-40. DOI: 10.3733/hilg.v14n08p411 [CrossRef]

Severin H. H. P. Transmission of California aster-yellows virus by leafhopper species in Thamnotettix group. Hilgardia. 1948. 18(4):201-16. DOI: 10.3733/hilg.v18n04p201 [CrossRef]

Zetterstedt J. W. Insecta Japponica descripta 1840. p.135. col. 292.

DeLong D, Severin H. 1948. Characters, distribution, and food plants of leafhopper species in Thamnotettix group. Hilgardia 18(4):185-199. DOI:10.3733/hilg.v18n04p185
Webmaster Email: sjosterman@ucanr.edu