Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Toxoptera aurantii, also known as both the black citrus aphid and brown citrus aphid, is a species of aphid in the superfamily Aphidoidea in the order Hemiptera. It is a true bug and sucks sap from plants. It is known to hosts in well over 150+ plant species. [1]
Toxoptera citricida (syn. Toxoptera citricidus) is a species of aphid known by the common names brown citrus aphid, black citrus aphid, and oriental citrus aphid. It is a pest of citrus and vector for the pathogenic plant virus citrus tristeza virus. The aphid spread the virus through citrus groves in Brazil and Venezuela in the 1970s, leading ...
Aphis spiraecola (green citrus aphid) [26] Bruchophagus roddi (alfalfa seed chalcid) [27] Cerataphis lataniae (palm aphid) [28] Ceratitis capitata (Mediterranean fruit fly) [29] Corythucha ciliata (sycamore lace bug) [30] Diuraphis noxia (Russian wheat aphid) [31] Euwallacea fornicatus (tea shot-hole borer) [32] Forficula auricularia (common ...
Aphis fabae - blackfly, black bean aphid, bean aphid, or beet leaf aphid; Aphis gossypii - cotton aphid, melon aphid, or melon and cotton aphid; Beech blight aphid (Grylloprociphilus imbricator) Brevicoryne brassicae - cabbage aphid, cabbage aphid, or turnip aphid; Cinara cupressi - cypress aphid; Macrosiphum euphorbiae - potato aphid
Aphis is a genus of insects in the family Aphididae containing at least 600 species of aphids. [1] It includes many notorious agricultural pests , such as the soybean aphid Aphis glycines . Many species of Aphis , such as A. coreopsidis and A. fabae , are myrmecophiles , forming close associations with ants .
citrus aphid (Toxoptera aurantii) [3] mould mite (Tyrophagus putrescentiae) [1] Xyleborus cordatus [1] Xyleborus declivigranulatus [1] typical bark beetle (Xyleborus ferrugineus) [1] tea shot hole borer (Xyleborus fornicatus) [3] Xyleborus formicatus [1] Xyleborus similis [1] Xyleborus testsceus (syn. Xyleborus perforans) [1] borer (Zeuzera sp ...
Diaphorina citri, the Asian citrus psyllid, is a sap-sucking, hemipteran bug now in the taxonomic family Liviidae. [1] It is one of two confirmed vectors of citrus greening disease . [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It has a wide distribution in southern Asia and has spread to other citrus growing regions.
Aphis spiraecola is a species of aphid described in 1914 by Edith Marion Patch. [1] Its common names include green citrus aphid, [2] Spirea aphid, [3] and apple aphid. [4] It is distributed worldwide, and is most abundant in the United States. [5] It has a diploid chromosome number of 2n=8. [6]