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  2. Coreidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coreidae

    A female leaf-footed bug, family Coreidae and tribe Acanthocephalini, deposits an egg before flying off. Coreidae is a large family of predominantly sap-sucking insects in the Hemipteran suborder Heteroptera. [1] The name "Coreidae" derives from the genus Coreus, which derives from the Ancient Greek κόρις (kóris) meaning bedbug. [2]

  3. Western conifer seed bug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_conifer_seed_bug

    These, being Cimicomorpha, are not very closely related to leaf-footed bugs as Heteroptera go; though both have a proboscis, but only the assassin bugs bite even if unprovoked, and L. occidentalis like its closest relatives can be most easily recognized by the expanded hindleg tibiae and by the alternating light and dark bands which run along ...

  4. Leptoglossus zonatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leptoglossus_zonatus

    This leaf-footed bug is one of the two major pests of physic nut plants in Nicaragua. [2] In Honduras, where the bug is known commonly as chinche patona (large-legged bug), it is a minor garden pest. [3] It is a pest of many crops in Brazil and it may transmit the plant pathogen Herpetomonas macgheei, a trypanosomatid protozoan. [3]

  5. Leptoglossus phyllopus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leptoglossus_phyllopus

    Leptoglossus phyllopus or eastern leaf-footed bug is a species of leaf-footed bugs in the same genus as the western conifer seed bug (L. occidentalis. The Eastern leaf-footed bug is found throughout the southern United States, from Florida to California, through Mexico, and as far south as Costa Rica. [1] These bugs are a common garden insect ...

  6. Zelus renardii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zelus_renardii

    Zelus renardii, commonly known as the leaf hopper assassin bug, [1] [2] is a predacious insect contained within tribe Harpactorini. [3] Diurnal and found on both wild and crop plants, Z. renardii has spread from its native habitats in western North and Central America into three other biogeographic regions across the globe.

  7. Hemiptera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemiptera

    shield bugs, seed bugs, assassin bugs, flower bugs, leaf-footed bugs, water bugs, plant bugs: larger bugs; some are predatory, others are plant-sucking Sternorrhyncha: 12,500: Upper Permian: aphids, whiteflies, scale insects: plant-sucking bugs, some major horticultural pests; most are small and sedentary or fully sessile; [28]

  8. Leptoglossus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leptoglossus

    Leptoglossus [1] is a genus of true bugs in the leaf-footed bug family and the tribe Anisoscelini. Species are distributed throughout the Americas, with some records in eastern & southern Asia and Europe (mostly introductions). [2] Several species [example needed] are economic pests of agricultural crops. [3]

  9. Leptoglossus clypealis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leptoglossus_clypealis

    They are brown with flared, leaf-like expansions near their feet and a pale band across their wings. [5] L. clypealis is commonly found on juniper, but can be a pest to agricultural crops. [5] In the 1980s, Hasan Bolkan discovered that the leaf-footed bug was a cause of lesions on commercially produced pistachio crops. [6]