Hemiptera of Cyprus : Issidae Family

Agalmatium bilobum Issidae
Agalmatium flavescens Issidae
Bubastia ephialtes Issidae
Issus bellardi Issidae
Issus fieberi Issidae
Latematium cypriacum Issidae
Latilica maculipes Issidae
Latilica quercus Issidae
Libanissum talhouki Issidae
Mycterodus denticulatus Issidae
Mycterodus intricatus Issidae
Palmallorcus balearicus Issidae
Tshurtshurnella campestre Issidae
Tshurtshurnella duffelsi Issidae

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Issidae is a family of planthoppers described by Spinola in 1839, belonging to the order Hemiptera, suborder Auchenorrhyncha superfamily Fulgoroidea.

Distribution

Species of this family are present throughout the Northern Hemisphere.

Description

Issidae are small insects generally with a stocky body, as the wings mainly develop in width. Basic body coloration is not striking, usually shows brownish colors. The head has two ocelli. The forewings have strong pronounced ribs. They wrap the abdomen when the insect is at rest. The family originally included approximately 1000 species with 215 genera, but the systematics of Issidae remains uncertain, with many of the subfamilies having been recently removed to separate families, including CaliscelidaeNogodinidae, and Tropiduchidae.

In 2013, scientists described a biologically unique set of mechanical gears in an Issus nymph, though identical structures are known in most planthoppers, and were known for decades[1] before the function of the gears was discovered[2][3]

Taxonomy[edit]

The family Issidae was once large and included many groups which are now treated in other families or as families themselves. These groups include the CaliscelidaeNogodinidae, and Tropiduchidae (e.g., subfamilies Tonginae and Trienopinae). Around 2003, there was a view in favour of a single subfamily Issinae, but the current consensus is placement in four (as below). The Catalogue of Life[4] lists genera in five tribes IssiniParahiraciiniHemisphaeriini and Thioniini. The tribe Colpopterini[5] have now been placed in family Nogodinidae Melichar, 1898 having been raised to a subfamily.[6] The oldest fossil of the group is Cubicostissus of the Paleocene Menat Formation of France, belonging to the tribe Hysteropterini, molecular clock calibrations suggest a diversification during the Upper Cretaceous.[7]