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Telenomus Bakeri
''Telenomus'' is a genus of parasitoid wasps from the subfamily Telenominae. The genus was first described by Alexander Henry Haliday in 1833. Species in this genus parasitise the eggs or immature stages of other insects. Known hosts include : ''Agrius convolvuli'', ''Amsacta moorei'', ''Bagrada hilaris'', ''Chilo auricilius'', ''Cricula trifenestrata'', '' Eudocima fullonia'', ''Helicoverpa armigera'', '' Helicoverpa punctigera'', ''Helopeltis antonii'', ''Helopeltis theivora'', ''Leptocybe invasa'', ''Orgyia postica'', '' Piezodorus hybneri'', and ''Sahlbergella singularis''. Species This list is incomplete: See List of ''Telenomus'' species. * ''Telenomus alsophilae ''Telenomus'' is a genus of parasitoid wasps from the subfamily Telenominae. The genus was first described by Alexander Henry Haliday in 1833. Species in this genus parasitise the eggs or immature stages of other insects. Known hosts include ...'' Viereck, 1924 * '' Telenomus arzamae'' Riley, 1893 ...
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Heteroptera
The Heteroptera are a group of about 40,000 species of insects in the order Hemiptera. They are sometimes called "true bugs", though that name more commonly refers to the Hemiptera as a whole. "Typical bugs" might be used as a more unequivocal alternative, since the heteropterans are most consistently and universally termed "bugs" among the Hemiptera. "Heteroptera" is Greek for "different wings": most species have forewings with both membranous and hardened portions (called hemelytra); members of the primitive sub-group Enicocephalomorpha have completely membranous wings. The name "Heteroptera" is used in two very different ways in modern classifications. In Linnean nomenclature, it commonly appears as a suborder within the order Hemiptera, where it can be paraphyletic or monophyletic depending on its delimitation. In phylogenetic nomenclature, it is used as an unranked clade within the Prosorrhyncha clade, which in turn is in the Hemiptera clade. This results from the realiza ...
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Cricula Trifenestrata
''Cricula trifenestrata'', the cricula silkmoth, is a species of wild silk moth of the family Saturniidae. It is found from India to the Philippines, Sulawesi, Java, and Sri Lanka. Description The wingspan is 65–100 mm. Adults are on wing from May to June with a possible second brood from August to September. Male is brown, ochreous, yellowish to reddish. Forewings are consisted with a waved anti-medial dark line and a small hyaline spot beyond the end of the cell, with one or two others above it. The upper one is a dark spot. Hindwings with oblique line continued to the inner margin before the middle. There is a hyaline spot beyond the cell. Ventral side is much purple. Female is red. There are three large irregularly shaped hyaline spots beyond the cell of the forewing, often with one or two small sides inside them. Larva is blackish brown with red spots in color and hairy. There are six setiferous tubercles in each somite from 2nd to 11th. First somite and anal cla ...
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Telenomus Bakeri
''Telenomus'' is a genus of parasitoid wasps from the subfamily Telenominae. The genus was first described by Alexander Henry Haliday in 1833. Species in this genus parasitise the eggs or immature stages of other insects. Known hosts include : ''Agrius convolvuli'', ''Amsacta moorei'', ''Bagrada hilaris'', ''Chilo auricilius'', ''Cricula trifenestrata'', '' Eudocima fullonia'', ''Helicoverpa armigera'', '' Helicoverpa punctigera'', ''Helopeltis antonii'', ''Helopeltis theivora'', ''Leptocybe invasa'', ''Orgyia postica'', '' Piezodorus hybneri'', and ''Sahlbergella singularis''. Species This list is incomplete: See List of ''Telenomus'' species. * ''Telenomus alsophilae ''Telenomus'' is a genus of parasitoid wasps from the subfamily Telenominae. The genus was first described by Alexander Henry Haliday in 1833. Species in this genus parasitise the eggs or immature stages of other insects. Known hosts include ...'' Viereck, 1924 * '' Telenomus arzamae'' Riley, 1893 ...
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Telenomus Arzamae
''Telenomus'' is a genus of parasitoid wasps from the subfamily Telenominae. The genus was first described by Alexander Henry Haliday in 1833. Species in this genus parasitise the eggs or immature stages of other insects. Known hosts include : ''Agrius convolvuli'', ''Amsacta moorei'', ''Bagrada hilaris'', ''Chilo auricilius'', ''Cricula trifenestrata'', '' Eudocima fullonia'', ''Helicoverpa armigera'', '' Helicoverpa punctigera'', ''Helopeltis antonii'', ''Helopeltis theivora'', ''Leptocybe invasa'', ''Orgyia postica'', '' Piezodorus hybneri'', and ''Sahlbergella singularis''. Species This list is incomplete: See List of ''Telenomus'' species. * ''Telenomus alsophilae'' Viereck, 1924 * '' Telenomus arzamae'' Riley, 1893 * ''Telenomus bakeri ''Telenomus'' is a genus of parasitoid wasps from the subfamily Telenominae. The genus was first described by Alexander Henry Haliday in 1833. Species in this genus parasitise the eggs or immature stages of other insects. K ...
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Telenomus Alsophilae
''Telenomus'' is a genus of parasitoid wasps from the subfamily Telenominae. The genus was first described by Alexander Henry Haliday in 1833. Species in this genus parasitise the eggs or immature stages of other insects. Known hosts include : ''Agrius convolvuli'', '' Amsacta moorei'', '' Bagrada hilaris'', '' Chilo auricilius'', '' Cricula trifenestrata'', '' Eudocima fullonia'', '' Helicoverpa armigera'', ''Helicoverpa punctigera'', '' Helopeltis antonii'', '' Helopeltis theivora'', ''Leptocybe invasa'', ''Orgyia postica ''Orgyia postica'', the cocoa tussock moth or hevea tussock moth, is a species of moth of the subfamily Lymantriinae of family Erebidae found from the Oriental tropics of India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Borneo, Java, New Guinea and Taiwan. It was descr ...'', '' Piezodorus hybneri'', and '' Sahlbergella singularis''. Species This list is incomplete: See List of ''Telenomus'' species. * '' Telenomus alsophilae'' Viereck, 1924 * '' Telenomus arzamae'' Ri ...
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List Of Telenomus Species
Compiled from Australian Faunal Directory, IRMNG, GBIF The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) is an international organisation that focuses on making scientific data on biodiversity available via the Internet using web services. The data are provided by many institutions from around the ..., and Insects of the World. (Species from GBIF include species which are not accepted.) a = AFD, i=IRMNG, g=GBIF, w=Insecta. References {{reflist Platygastridae Lists of Hymenoptera ...
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Sahlbergella Singularis
''Sahlbergella'' is a genus of African bugs in the family Miridae and tribe Dicyphini (subtribe Odoniellina). Species are mostly distributed in Africa, where ''S. singularis'' is a major insect pest of cacao: causing damage similar to ''Distantiella'' in tropical Africa and '' Helopeltis'' spp. in SE Asia.Entwistle PF (1972) ''Pests of Cocoa'', Longmans, London, 779 pp Species The Global Biodiversity Information Facility lists: # ''Sahlbergella ghesquierei'' Schouteden, 1935 # ''Sahlbergella lais'' Linnavuori, 1973 # ''Sahlbergella maynei ''Sahlbergella'' is a genus of African bugs in the family Miridae and tribe Dicyphini (subtribe Odoniellina). Species are mostly distributed in Africa, where ''S. singularis'' is a major insect pest of cacao: causing damage similar to ''Distan ...'' Schouteden, 1935 # '' Sahlbergella singularis'' Haglund, 1895 - type speciesNamyatova AA, Cassis G (2016) Systematics of the tribe Monaloniini ''Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society'', 1 ...
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Piezodorus Hybneri
''Piezodorus'' is a genus of Pentatomidae, a family of shield bugs. Species *''Piezodorus guildinii'' Westwood *'' Piezodorus lituratus'' (Fabricius, 1794) – gorse shield bug *'' Piezodorus punctipes'' Puton, 1889 *''Piezodorus rubrofasciatus'' (Fabricius, 1787) *''Piezodorus teretipes ''Piezodorus'' is a genus of Pentatomidae, a family of shield bugs. Species *'' Piezodorus guildinii'' Westwood *''Piezodorus lituratus'' (Fabricius, 1794) – gorse shield bug *''Piezodorus punctipes'' Puton, 1889 *''Piezodorus rubrofasciatus ...'' (Stål, 1865) References Pentatomidae genera Pentatomini {{Pentatomidae-stub ...
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Orgyia Postica
''Orgyia postica'', the cocoa tussock moth or hevea tussock moth, is a species of moth of the subfamily Lymantriinae of family Erebidae found from the Oriental tropics of India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Borneo, Java, New Guinea and Taiwan. It was described by Francis Walker in 1855. Description The wingspan is 20–30 mm for males. In the male, the head, thorax, and abdomen are brownish. Forewings are brown with an indistinct oblique sub-basal line. Waved antemedial and postmedial lines approach each other at the lower angle of the cell. The area between them is slightly tinged with bluish grey and with a waved dark line edged with white on each side of the discocellulars. Two indistinct waved submarginal lines are present. The apex is slightly tinged with grey and with some subapical dark streaks. Hindwings are dark brown. The female is wingless. Larvae are yellowish, clothed sparsely with brown hair. One dorsal and two lateral brown bands are seen. Paired tufts of hair are on ...
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Leptocybe Invasa
''Leptocybe invasa'', the blue gum chalcid wasp or eucalyptus gall wasp, is a chalcid wasp which is the only species in the monotypic genus ''Leptocybe'' in the subfamily Tetrastichinae, of the family Eulophidae. It is a gall wasp which causes the formation of galls on a number of species of ''Eucalyptus'', it was described in 2004 after galls were found in river red gums (''Eucalyptus camaldulensis'') in the Mediterranean and Middle East and has since been found to be a widespread species where its host trees are planted. It is indigenous to Australia. Description This tiny wasp is just over one millimeter in length. Its body is brown with a slight blue to green iridescence. Parts of the legs are yellowish in color. Distribution ''Leptocybe invasa'' is native to Queensland, Australia where its exact distribution has yet to be determined. It has now been found as an invasive species in eucalypts in northern, eastern and southern Africa, Asia, the Pacific Region, Europe as f ...
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Helopeltis Theivora
The genus ''Helopeltis'', also known as mosquito bugs, is a group of Heteropterans in the family Miridae (capsid bugs) and tribe Dicyphini. They include important pests of various crops, including cacao, cashew, cotton and tea. Now in a different subgenus, a number of similar ''Afropeltis'' species are pests in Africa. Mosquito bugs have a characteristic spine on the scutellum, which is a diagnostic feature. Classification in the field is based on morphological characteristics, with considerable variations in colouration between insects of the same species (although for example, ''H. theivora'' is characteristically green and ''H. antonii'' red-brown). Damage and distribution With typical Hemipteran sucking mouthparts, they pierce plant tissues and cause damage ranging from leaf tattering and fruit blemishes, to complete death of shoots, branches or whole plants. There has been evident speciation along the islands of the Malay archipelago and there may be cryptic species in thi ...
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Helopeltis Antonii
''Helopeltis antonii'', also known as the tea mosquito bug, are heteropterans found within the Miridae family. They have a relatively large geographical distribution and are a known pest of many agricultural “cash” crops such as cocoa, cashew, and tea. Subsequently, their impact negatively influences economic growth within the regions in which they inhabit. Thus, their impact on humans has caused them to be of great interest biologically, resulting in significant environmental implications. Distribution ''Helopeltis antonii'' are found in a region known as the old-world tropics which encompasses places such as India, Northern Australia, Guinea, Vietnam, Tanzania, Nigeria, and Indonesia.Rebijith, K. B., R. Asokan, N. K. K. Kumar, K. K. Srikumar, V. V. Ramamurthy, and P. S. Bhat. 2012. DNA Barcoding and Development of Species-Specific Markers for the Identification of Tea Mosquito Bugs (Miridae: Heteroptera) in India. Environmental Entomology 41:1239–1245Srikumar, K. K., P. ...
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