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Cicadidae, the true cicadas, [1] is one of two families of cicadas, containing almost all living cicada species with more than 3,200 species worldwide. Evolution
Tettigarctidae and Cicadidae had diverged from each other prior to or during the Jurassic, as evidenced by fossils related to both lineages present by the Middle Jurassic (~ 165 million years ago) The morphology of well preserved fossils of early relatives of Cicadidae from the mid Cretaceous Burmese amber of Myanmar suggests that unlike many ...
Exuviae of Tibicen plebejus nymph (Cryptotympanini) Annual Cicada, Neotibicen. The Cicadinae are a subfamily of cicadas, containing the translucent cicadas.They are robust cicadas and many have gaudy colors, but they generally lack the butterfly-like opaque wing markings found in many species of the related Tibiceninae.
Cicadas of the genus Neotibicen are large-bodied insects of the family Cicadidae that appear in summer or early fall in eastern North America and formerly Bermuda. [1] Common names include cicada, harvestfly, jar fly, [2] and the misnomer locust. [3]
Neotibicen tibicen, known generally as the swamp cicada or morning cicada, is a species of cicada in the family Cicadidae. It is widespread across much of the eastern and central United States and portions of southeastern Canada. [ 1 ]
The scissor grinder is similar in appearance to many other species in its genus. It is mostly green with many complex markings on its body. Its abdomen is entirely black.. A rare pale variant of the scissor grinder occurs in southeastern Kansas and eastern Oklahoma. [6]
Tibicen is a former genus name in the insect family Cicadidae (order Hemiptera) that was originally published by P. A. Latreille in 1825 [1] and formally made available in a translation by A. A. Berthold in 1827. [2]
Tettigadini is a tribe of cicadas in the family Cicadidae. There are about 11 genera and at least 50 described species in Tettigadini, found in the Neotropics . [ 1 ] [ 2 ]