Overview
Leafhopper is a common name applied to any from the family Cicadellidae. Leafhoppers, colloquially known as "hoppers", are minute plant-feeding insects in the superfamily Membracoidea in the order Hemiptera. They belong to a lineage traditionally treated as infraorder Cicadomorpha in the suborder Auchenorrhyncha, but as the latter taxon is probably not monophyletic many modern authors prefer to abolish the Auchenorrhyncha and elevate the cicadomorphs to a suborder Clypeorrhyncha.
Leafhoppers are found all over the world and constitute is the second-largest family in the Hemiptera. They have at least 20,000 described species. The tribe Proconiini of the subfamily Cicadellinae is commonly known as sharpshooters.
Description and Ecology
The Cicadellidae combine the following features:
- thickened part of the antennae very short and ending with a bristle (arista)
- two ocelli (simple eyes) present on the top or front of the head
- tarsi made of three segments
- front femora with at most weak spines
- hind tibiae with one or more distinct keels, with a row of movable spines on each, sometimes on enlarged bases
- base of middle legs close together where they originate under the thorax
- front wings not particularly thickened.
An additional and unique character of leafhoppers is the production of brochosomes which are thought to protect the animals and particularly their egg clutches from predation and pathogens.
Like other Exopterygota, the leafhoppers undergo direct development from nymph to adult without a pupal stage. While many leafhoppers are drab little insects as is typical for the Membracoidea, the adults and nymphs of some species are quite colorful. Some – in particular Stegelytrinae – have largely translucent wings and resemble flies at a casual glance.
Leafhoppers have piercing-sucking mouthparts, enabling them to feed on plant sap. A leafhoppers' diet commonly consists of sap from a wide and diverse range of plants, but some are more host-specific. Leafhoppers mainly are herbivores but some are known to eat smaller insects such as aphids on occasion. A few species are known to be mud-puddling, but as it seems females rarely engage in such behavior. Leafhoppers can transmit plant pathogens such as viruses, phytoplasmas[1] and bacteria. Cicadellidae species that are significant agricultural pests include the Beet Leafhopper (Circulifer tenellus), Potato Leafhopper (Empoasca fabae), Two-spotted Leafhopper (Sophonia rufofascia), Glassy-winged Sharpshooter (Homalodisca vitripennis), The Common Brown Leafhopper (Orosius orientalis) and White Apple Leafhopper (Typhlocyba pomaria).
In some cases the plant pathogens distributed by leafhoppers are also pathogens of the insect themselves and can replicate within the leafhoppers' salivary glands. Leafhoppers are also susceptible to various insect pathogens, including Dicistroviridae viruses, bacteria and fungi; numerous parasitoids attack the eggs and the adults provide food for small insectivores.
Systematics
In the now-obsolete classification that was used throughout much of the 20th century, the leafhoppers were part of the "Homoptera", a paraphyletic assemblage uniting the less advanced lineages of Hemiptera and ranked as suborder. The splitting of the "Homoptera" is likely to be repeated for the "Auchenorrhyncha" for similar reasons, as the "Auchenorrhyncha" simply seem to group the moderately advanced Hemiptera regardless of the fact that the highly apomorphic Coleorrhyncha and Heteroptera (typical bugs) evolved from "auchenorrhynchans". Hence, there is a recent trend to treat the most advanced h emipterans as three or four lineages, namely Archaeorrhyncha (Fulgoromorpha if included in "Auchenorrhyncha"), Coleorrhyncha and Heteroptera (sometimes united as Prosorrhyncha) and Clypeorrhyncha.[2]
Within the latter, the three traditional superfamilies – Cercopoidea (froghoppers and spittlebugs), Cicadoidea (cicadas) and Membracoidea – appear to be monophyletic. The leafhoppers are the most basal living lineage of Membracoidea, which otherwise include the families Aetalionidae (aetalionid treehoppers), Membracidae (typical treehoppers and thorn bugs), Melizoderidae and the strange Myerslopiidae.[2]
Subfamilies

The leafhoppers are divided into a high number (about 40) of subfamilies, which are listed here alphabetically as too little is known about the family's internal phylogeny. Some notable genera and species are also listed.
Photos
Taxonomy
The Family Cicadellidae is a member of the Superfamily Cicadelloidea. Here is the complete "parentage" of Cicadellidae:
- Domain: Eukaryota
Whittaker & Margulis,1978 - eukaryotes
- Kingdom: Animalia
Linnaeus, 1758 - animals
- Subkingdom: Bilateria
(Hatschek, 1888) Cavalier-Smith, 1983 - bilaterians
- Branch: Protostomia
Grobben, 1908 - protostomes
- Infrakingdom: Ecdysozoa
Aguinaldo Et Al., 1997 Ex Cavalier-Smith, 1998 - ecdysozoans
- Superphylum: Panarthropoda
Cuvier
- Phylum: Arthropoda
Latreille, 1829 - Arthropods
- Subphylum: Mandibulata
Snodgrass, 1938
- Infraphylum: Atelocerata
Heymons, 1901
- Superclass: Panhexapoda
- Class: Insecta
C. Linnaeus, 1758 - Insects
- Subclass: Dicondylia
- Infraclass: Pterygota
- Winged Insects
- Superorder: Condylognatha
- Order: Hemiptera
C. Linnaeus, 1758 - True Bugs, Cicadas, Hoppers, Aphids and Allies
- Suborder: Auchenorrhyncha
- Cicadas
- Infraorder: Cicadomorpha
- Superfamily: Cicadelloidea
- Family: Cicadellidae - Leafhoppers
- Superfamily: Cicadelloidea
- Infraorder: Cicadomorpha
- Suborder: Auchenorrhyncha
- Cicadas
- Order: Hemiptera
C. Linnaeus, 1758 - True Bugs, Cicadas, Hoppers, Aphids and Allies
- Superorder: Condylognatha
- Infraclass: Pterygota
- Winged Insects
- Subclass: Dicondylia
- Class: Insecta
C. Linnaeus, 1758 - Insects
- Superclass: Panhexapoda
- Infraphylum: Atelocerata
Heymons, 1901
- Subphylum: Mandibulata
Snodgrass, 1938
- Phylum: Arthropoda
Latreille, 1829 - Arthropods
- Superphylum: Panarthropoda
Cuvier
- Infrakingdom: Ecdysozoa
Aguinaldo Et Al., 1997 Ex Cavalier-Smith, 1998 - ecdysozoans
- Branch: Protostomia
Grobben, 1908 - protostomes
- Subkingdom: Bilateria
(Hatschek, 1888) Cavalier-Smith, 1983 - bilaterians
- Kingdom: Animalia
Linnaeus, 1758 - animals
The Family Cicadellidae is further organized into finer groupings including:
- Subfamily (5): Cicadellinae · Deltocephalinae · Eupelicinae · Iassinae · Ledrinae
- Tribe (1): Cicadellini
- Genus (448): Abana · Aceratagallia · Acericerus · Acinopterus · Acocephalus · Aconura · Aconurella · Acrobelus · Acrulogonia · Acusana · Adarrus · Aflexia · Agallia · Agalliopsis · Agalliota · Aglena · Agriahana · Agrosoma · Aguahua · Aguriahana · Alconeura · Alebra · Allygidius · Allygus · Alnetoidea · Alobaldia · Alpina · Amblydisca · Amblyscarta · Amblyscartidia · Amblysellus · Amplicephalus · Anaceratagallia · Anatkina · Anoplotettix · Anoscopus · Anoterostemma · Apheliona · Aphrodes · Araldus · Arboridia · Arocephalus · Arragsia · Arthaldeus · Artianus · Asianidia · Aspilodora · Asymmetrasca · Athysanella · Atkinsoniella · Attenuipyga · Aulacizes · Auridius · Austroagallia · Austroagalloides · Austroasca · Balcanocerus · Balclutha · Baleja · Balocerus · Balocha · Bannalgaechungia · Barbatana · Bathysmatophorus · Batrachomorphus · Begonalia · Beirneola · Bhandara · Bhooria · Biza · Boreotettix · Bothrogonia · Brunotartessus · Busoniomimus · Bythoscopus · Calamotettix · Caldwelliola · Calliscarta · Candulifera · Caragonalia · Cardioscarta · Carneocephala · Catagonalia · Catorthorrhinus · Cechenotettix · Cephalogonalia · Ceratagallia · Chinaella · Chlorita · Chlorogonalia · Chloropelix · Chlorotettix · Chudania · Cicadella · Cicadula · Cicadulina · Circulifer · Ciudadrea · Cleptochiton · Coelidia · Cofana · Colladonus · Coloborrhis · Confluens · Conosanus · Coryphaelus · Cosmotettix · Coulinus · Crossogonalia · Cuerna · Cunedda · Curtara · Cyclogonia · Cyrtodisca · Dasmeusa · Deltocephalus · Depanana · Desamera · Deselvana · Destria · Dhongariva · Dialecticopteryx · Dictyassa · Dictyodisca · Diedrocephala · Diestostemma · Dikraneura · Dikrella · Dilobopterus · Diplocolenus · Doleranus · Doliotettix · Doratura · Doraturopsis · Dorydiella · Drabescoides · Drabescus · Draeculacephala · Dryadomorpha · Dryodurgades · Dudanus · Dussana · Dziwneono · Ebarrius · Ederranus · Edwardsiana · Egidemia · Elymana · Emelyanoviana · Empoasca · Empoascanara · Enantiocephalus · Endria · Epipsychidion · Eremochlorita · Erotettix · Errastunus · Errhomenellus · Errhomenus · Errhomus · Erythria · Erythrogonia · Erythroneura · Eupelix · Eupterycyba · Eupteryx · Eurinoscopus · Eurymela · Eurymeloides · Euscelidius · Euscelis · Eutandra · Eutettix · Evacanthus · Exitianus · Fagocyba · Fibragallia · Ficocyba · Fieberiella · Flexamia · Forcipata · Fruticidia · Fusigonalia · Gillonella · Giprus · Glossocratus · Gnathodus · Goniagnathus · Graminea · Graminella · Graphocephala · Graphocraerus · Grypotes · Gununga · Gypona · Gyponana · Haldorus · Hardya · Hauptidia · Hebecephalus · Hecalocratus · Hecalus · Heliona · Helionidia · Helochara · Hephathus · Hephatus · Hesium · Homalodisca · Homoscarta · Hortensia · Hydabricta · Iassus · Ibadarrus · Idiocerus · Idiodonus · Igerna · Ileopeltus · Ipo · Ishidaella · Ishiharella · Isogonalia · Jacobiasca · Jamitettix · Japananus · Jassargus · Jassopronus · Jassus · Jikradia · Juliaca · Kahaono · Kahavalu · Kansendria · Koreocerus · Kosmiopelex · Kropka · Kurotsuyanus · Kyboasca · Kybos · Ladoffa · Laevicephalus · Lamprotettix · Latalus · Lebradea · Ledra · Liguropia · Limotettix · Lindbergina · Lissoscarta · Lodiana · Lonatura · Luzoniana · Macroceratogonia · Macrolophus · Macropsidius · Macropsis · Macrosteles · Macugonalia · Macunolla · Macustus · Mareja · Megophthalmus · Melanota · Melillaia · Mendozellus · Mendrausus · Menosoma · Mesamia · Mesogonia · Metalimnus · Metidiocerus · Micantulina · Microgoniella · Mimallygus · Mocuellus · Mocydia · Mocydiopsis · Neoaliturus · Neocoelidia · Neokolla · Neolimnus · Neonirvana · Neotartessus · Neotituria · Nephotettix · Nesophrosyne · Nesophyla · Nesosteles · Nielsonia · Norvellina · Ochrostacta · Oncometopia · Oncopsis · Onukia · Ophiola · Opsius · Oragua · Orbona · Orientus · Orosius · Osbornellus · Ossiannilssonola · Oxytettigella · Pagaronia · Paluda · Pamplonoidea · Pantallus · Parabolocratus · Paracarinolidia · Paradorydium · Paralimnus · Parallaxis · Paramesus · Paraphlepsius · Paraphlepus · Parapotes · Paraulacizes · Parocerus · Paromenia · Paropulopa · Pascoepus · Pediopsis · Pegogonia · Penestragania · Penthimia · Penthimiola · Perotettix · Pettya · Phera · Phlepsius · Pilosana · Pinumius · Pithyotettix · Placotettix · Planicephalus · Platymetopius · Pleargus · Plerogonalia · Plesiommata · Podulmorinus · Poecilocarda · Polana · Polyamia · Ponana · Populicerus · Praganus · Prairiana · Prescottia · Procandea · Proceps · Proconia · Proranus · Protalebrella · Psammotettix · Pseudonirvana · Pseudophera · Pseudophlepsius · Putoniessa · Quichira · Recilia · Rhoananus · Rhopalopyx · Rhytidodus · Rhytistylus · Ribautiana · Rosenus · Rosopaella · Sagatus · Sahlbergotettix · Sailerana · Sanctanus · Sardius · Scaphoideus · Scaphtopius · Scaphytopius · Schildola · Scleroracus · Scoposcartula · Selachina · Selenocephalus · Sibovia · Sidelloides · Sochinsogonia · Sonesimia · Sonronius · Soosiulus · Sorhoanus · Sotanus · Spangbergiella · Speudotettix · Sphaeropogonia · Spongophorus · Stegelytra · Stehlikiana · Stenidiocerus · Stictocoris · Stirellus · Stragania · Streptanus · Streptopyx · Stroggylocephalus · Sulamicerus · Syncharina · Synophropsis · Tacora · Tamaricella · Tantulidia · Tapajosa · Tartessus · Tautocerus · Teleogonia · Teletusa · Tetartostylus · Tettigella · Tettigoniella · Tettisama · Texananus · Thagria · Thamnotettix · Tharra · Thomsoniella · Tlagonalia · Tongdotettix · Tortigonalia · Tortor · Tremulicerus · Trichogonia · Turrutus · Tylozygus · Typhlocyba · Typhlocybella · Ulopa · Verdanus · Versigonalia · Viridicerus · Vulturnus · Wagneriala · Wagneripteryx · Willeiana · Xestocephalus · Yanocephalus · Youngiada · Yunga · Ziczacella · Zonocyba · Zygina · Zyginidia · Zyzzogeton
- Species: ZipcodeZoo has pages for 2,266 species and subspecies in the Family Cicadellidae.
Genera
Abana
Aceratagallia
Acericerus
Acinopterus
Acocephalus
Aconura
Aconurella
Acrobelus
Acrulogonia
Acusana
Adarrus
Aflexia
Agallia
Agalliopsis
Agalliota
Aglena
Agriahana
Agrosoma
Aguahua
Aguriahana
Alconeura
Alebra
Allygidius
Allygus
Alnetoidea
Alobaldia
Alpina
A Genus in the Kingdom Animalia.[1] [more]
Amblydisca
Amblyscarta
Amblyscartidia
Amblysellus
Amplicephalus
Anaceratagallia
Anatkina
Anoplotettix
Anoscopus
Anoterostemma
Apheliona
Aphrodes
Araldus
Arboridia
Arocephalus
Arragsia
Arthaldeus
Artianus
Asianidia
Aspilodora
Asymmetrasca
Athysanella
Atkinsoniella
Attenuipyga
Aulacizes
Auridius
Austroagallia
Austroagalloides
Austroasca
Balcanocerus
Balclutha
Baleja
Balocerus
Balocha
Bannalgaechungia
Barbatana
Bathysmatophorus
Batrachomorphus
Begonalia
Beirneola
Bhandara
Bhooria
Biza
Boreotettix
Bothrogonia
Brunotartessus
Busoniomimus
Bythoscopus
Calamotettix
Caldwelliola
Calliscarta
Candulifera
Caragonalia
Cardioscarta
Carneocephala
Catagonalia
Catorthorrhinus
Cechenotettix
Cephalogonalia
Ceratagallia
Chinaella
Chlorita
Chlorogonalia
Chloropelix
Chlorotettix
Chudania
Cicadella
Cicadula
Cicadulina
Circulifer
Ciudadrea
Cleptochiton
Coelidia
Cofana
Colladonus
Coloborrhis
Confluens
A Genus in the Kingdom Animalia.[2] [more]
Conosanus
Coryphaelus
Cosmotettix
Coulinus
Crossogonalia
Cuerna
Cunedda
Curtara
Cyclogonia
Cyrtodisca
Dasmeusa
Deltocephalus
Depanana
Desamera
Deselvana
Destria
Dhongariva
Dialecticopteryx
Dictyassa
Dictyodisca
Diedrocephala
Diestostemma
Dikraneura
Dikrella
Dilobopterus
Diplocolenus
Doleranus
Doliotettix
Doratura
Doraturopsis
Dorydiella
Drabescoides
Drabescus
Draeculacephala
Dryadomorpha
Dryodurgades
Dudanus
Dussana
Dziwneono
Ebarrius
Ederranus
Edwardsiana
Egidemia
Elymana
Emelyanoviana
Empoasca
Empoascanara
Enantiocephalus
Endria
Epipsychidion
Eremochlorita
Erotettix
Errastunus
Errhomenellus
Errhomenus
Errhomus
Erythria
Erythrogonia
Erythroneura
Eupelix
Eupterycyba
Eupteryx
Eurinoscopus
Eurymela
Eurymeloides
Euscelidius
Euscelis
Eutandra
Eutettix
Evacanthus
Exitianus
Fagocyba
Fibragallia
Ficocyba
Fieberiella
Flexamia
Forcipata
Fruticidia
Fusigonalia
Gillonella
Giprus
Glossocratus
Gnathodus
Goniagnathus
Graminea
Graminella
Graphocephala
Graphocraerus
Grypotes
Gununga
Gypona
Gyponana
Haldorus
Hardya
Hauptidia
Hebecephalus
Hecalocratus
Hecalus
Heliona
Helionidia
Helochara
Hephathus
Hephatus
Hesium
Homalodisca
Homoscarta
Hortensia
Hydrangea ?/, common names Hydrangea and Hortensia) is a genus of about 70-75 species of native to southern and eastern Asia (China, Korea, Japan, the Himalayas, and Indonesia) and North and South America. By far the greatest species diversity is in eastern Asia, notably China, Korea, and Japan. Most are shrubs 1-3 m tall, but some are small trees, and others lianas reaching up to 30 m by climbing up trees. They can be either deciduous or evergreen, though the widely cultivated temperate species are all deciduous. [more]
Hydabricta
Iassus
Ibadarrus
Idiocerus
Idiocerus is a large genus of homopteran belonging to the family Cicadellidae (the leafhoppers). The group is characterized by a very short and broadly-rounded vertex (head); many are very similar and difficult to identify. Most are found on specific host plants, particularly poplars Populus and willows Salix. For instance the common European species I. vitreus is found exclusively on certain poplars. [more]
Idiodonus
Igerna
Ileopeltus
Ipo
Ishidaella
Ishiharella
Isogonalia
Jacobiasca
Jamitettix
Japananus
Jassargus
Jassopronus
Jassus
Jikradia
Juliaca
Kahaono
Kahavalu
Kansendria
Koreocerus
Kosmiopelex
Kropka
Kurotsuyanus
Kyboasca
Kybos
Ladoffa
Laevicephalus
Lamprotettix
Latalus
Lebradea
Ledra
A Genus in the Kingdom Animalia.[3] [more]
Liguropia
Limotettix
Lindbergina
Lissoscarta
Lodiana
Lonatura
Luzoniana
Macroceratogonia
Macrolophus
Macropsidius
Macropsis
Macrosteles
Macugonalia
Macunolla
Macustus
Mareja
Megophthalmus
Melanota
Melillaia
Mendozellus
Mendrausus
Menosoma
Mesamia
Mesogonia
Metalimnus
Metidiocerus
Micantulina
Microgoniella
Mimallygus
Mocuellus
Mocydia
Mocydiopsis
Neoaliturus
Neocoelidia
Neokolla
Neolimnus
Neonirvana
Neotartessus
Neotituria
Nephotettix
Nesophrosyne
Nesophyla
Nesosteles
Nielsonia
Norvellina
Ochrostacta
Oncometopia
Oncopsis
Onukia
Ophiola
Opsius
Oragua
Orbona
A Genus in the Kingdom Animalia.[4] [more]
Orientus
Orosius
Osbornellus
Ossiannilssonola
Oxytettigella
Pagaronia
Paluda
Pamplonoidea
Pantallus
Parabolocratus
Paracarinolidia
Paradorydium
Paralimnus
Parallaxis
Paramesus
Paraphlepsius
Paraphlepus
Parapotes
Paraulacizes
Parocerus
Paromenia
Paropulopa
Pascoepus
Pediopsis
Pegogonia
Penestragania
Penthimia
Penthimiola
Perotettix
Pettya
Phera
Phlepsius
Pilosana
Pinumius
Pithyotettix
Placotettix
Planicephalus
Platymetopius
Pleargus
Plerogonalia
Plesiommata
Podulmorinus
Poecilocarda
Polana
Polyamia
Ponana
A Genus in the Kingdom Animalia.[5] [more]
Populicerus
Praganus
Prairiana
Prescottia
Herbs, terrestrial. Roots fasciculate, fibrous or thick and fleshy, villous. Stems: rhizomes sometimes branched. Leaves basal, petiolate or sessile, not articulate, membranous. Inflorescences terminal, many-flowered spikes; peduncles partially covered by sheathing bracts. Flowers not resupinate, sessile; sepals spreading or reflexed, rarely distinct, basally connate forming short cup, thin; petals adnate to column and sepal cup, narrow, thin; lip distalmost in flower, attached to column foot, clawed, often basally auriculate distal to claw, deeply concave, often enclosing column, very fleshy; column and foot adnate to sepal cup when present, minute, column blunt; anther abaxial, erect; pollinia 4, slightly flattened, soft, mealy; caudicles absent; stigmas entire. Fruits capsules, ovoid to ellipsoid.[6] [more]
Procandea
Proceps
Proconia
Proranus
Protalebrella
Psammotettix
Pseudonirvana
Pseudophera
Pseudophlepsius
Putoniessa
Quichira
Recilia
Rhoananus
Rhopalopyx
Rhytidodus
Rhytistylus
Ribautiana
Rosenus
Rosopaella
Sagatus
Sahlbergotettix
Sailerana
Sanctanus
Sardius
Scaphoideus
Scaphtopius
Scaphytopius
Schildola
Scleroracus
Scoposcartula
Selachina
Selenocephalus
Sibovia
Sidelloides
Sochinsogonia
Sonesimia
Sonronius
Soosiulus
Sorhoanus
Sotanus
Spangbergiella
Speudotettix
Sphaeropogonia
Spongophorus
Stegelytra
Stehlikiana
Stenidiocerus
Stictocoris
Stirellus
Stragania
Streptanus
Streptopyx
Stroggylocephalus
Sulamicerus
Syncharina
Synophropsis
Tacora
Tamaricella
Tantulidia
Tapajosa
Tartessus
Tautocerus
Teleogonia
Teletusa
Tetartostylus
Tettigella
Tettigoniella
Tettisama
Texananus
Thagria
Thamnotettix
Tharra
Thomsoniella
Tlagonalia
Tongdotettix
Tortigonalia
Tortor
Tremulicerus
Trichogonia
Turrutus
Tylozygus
Typhlocyba
Typhlocybella
Ulopa
Verdanus
Versigonalia
Viridicerus
Vulturnus
Wagneriala
Wagneripteryx
Willeiana
Xestocephalus
Yanocephalus
Youngiada
Yunga
Ziczacella
Zonocyba
Zygina
Zyginidia
Zyzzogeton
More info about the Genus Zyzzogeton may be found here.
References
Footnotes
- http://bugguide.net/index.php?q=search&keys=Alpina&search=Search
- http://bugguide.net/index.php?q=search&keys=Confluens&search=Search
- http://bugguide.net/index.php?q=search&keys=Ledra&search=Search
- http://bugguide.net/index.php?q=search&keys=Orbona&search=Search
- http://bugguide.net/index.php?q=search&keys=Ponana&search=Search
- http://bugguide.net/index.php?q=search&keys=Prescottia&search=Search
Sources
- The text on this page is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It includes material from Wikipedia retrieved Thursday, August 13, 2009.
- The distribution map on the Distribution tab comes from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility and is used with permission.
- Photographs on this page are copyrighted by individual photographers, and individual copyrights apply.
- The GMapImageCutter is used under license from the UCL Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis.
- The technology underlying this page, including the Image Browser and controls behind Keep Exploring, is owned by the BayScience Foundation. All rights are reserved.
