Difference between revisions of "Sophonia orientalis"

From Pestinfo-Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{TaxLinks|LnkCicadellidae}}
 
{{TaxLinks|LnkCicadellidae}}
 
{{LiteratureDB|{{PAGENAME}}|browse,crops,benefialsN}}
 
{{LiteratureDB|{{PAGENAME}}|browse,crops,benefialsN}}
<font color="#800000">'''''Sophonia orientalis'''''</font> (Matsumura) - (twospotted leafhopper)<br/>
+
[[File:Sophonia orientalis BugGuide.jpg|250px|thumb|''Sophonia orientalis''<br/>Author: Jon Hart<br/>Source: [https://bugguide.net/node/view/1426279 BugGuide]]]
The leafhopper is native in Asia and was accidentially introduced into Hawaii in the late 1980s. It has been recorded from the Madeira and Canary Islands since 2000. It attacks many host plants and causes interveinal chlorosis on the leaves.
+
<font color="#800000">'''''Sophonia orientalis'''''</font> (Matsumura, 1912) - (twospotted leafhopper)
  
This species has been misidentified as ''Sophonia rufofascia'' (Kuoh and Kuoh) in the literature.
+
This leafhopper is native to Asia and was accidentally introduced into Hawaii in the late 1980s. It has been subsequently also recorded from other regions, including mainland North America, French Polynesia, as well as the Madeira and Canary Islands (off north-western Africa) since 2000. It attacks many host plants and causes interveinal chlorosis on the leaves.
 +
 
 +
''S. orientalis'' has been misidentified as ''Sophonia rufofascia'' (Kuoh and Kuoh) in some literature.
  
 
[[Category:Cicadellidae]]
 
[[Category:Cicadellidae]]

Latest revision as of 16:01, 6 April 2019


Literature database
15 articles sorted by:
year (recent ones first)
research topics
countries/regions
host plants
list of natural enemies
Sophonia orientalis
Author: Jon Hart
Source: BugGuide

Sophonia orientalis (Matsumura, 1912) - (twospotted leafhopper)

This leafhopper is native to Asia and was accidentally introduced into Hawaii in the late 1980s. It has been subsequently also recorded from other regions, including mainland North America, French Polynesia, as well as the Madeira and Canary Islands (off north-western Africa) since 2000. It attacks many host plants and causes interveinal chlorosis on the leaves.

S. orientalis has been misidentified as Sophonia rufofascia (Kuoh and Kuoh) in some literature.