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Wingless aphids feeding on a stem. The black bean aphid is a small, soft-bodied (meaning that the exocuticle part of the exoskeleton is greatly reduced) [5] insect that has specialised piercing and sucking mouthparts which are used to suck the juice from plants. This aphid is usually seen in large numbers and is a tiny, plump insect about two ...
Aphis craccivora is a small species of aphid. The female has a glossy black or dark brown body with a prominent cauda (tail-like protrusion), and legs in some shade of brown or yellow. The antennae have six segments and these and the limb segments, cauda and cornicles are pale proximally (close to the body) and dark distally (further from the ...
Some species such as Aphis fabae (black bean aphid), Metopolophium dirhodum (rose-grain aphid), Myzus persicae (peach-potato aphid), and Rhopalosiphum padi (bird cherry-oat aphid) are serious pests. They overwinter on primary hosts on trees or bushes; in summer, they migrate to their secondary host on a herbaceous plant, often a crop, then the ...
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 .
Aphis fabae Scopoli, 1763 i c g b (black bean aphid) Aphis farinosa Gmelin, 1790 c g b; Aphis feminea Hottes, 1930 c g; Aphis filifoliae (Gillette & M.A. Palmer, 1928) c g; Aphis filipendulae Matsumura, 1917 c g; Aphis fluvialis c g; Aphis fluviatilis Bozhko, 1976 g; Aphis foeniculivora Zhang, Guangxue, 1983 c g; Aphis folsomii Davis, 1908 c g b
Hemiptera (/ h ɛ ˈ m ɪ p t ər ə /; from Ancient Greek hemipterus 'half-winged') is an order of insects, commonly called true bugs, comprising over 80,000 species within groups such as the cicadas, aphids, planthoppers, leafhoppers, assassin bugs, bed bugs, and shield bugs.
The wingless female cotton aphid has an ovoid body about two millimetres long in varying shades of green. The legs are yellow, as are the antennae which are three quarters of the length of the body. The apices of the femora, tibia and tarsi are black. The cylindrical black siphunculi are wide at the base and one fifth of the body length. The ...