1. Liorhyssus hyalinus(F.) (Hemiptera: Rhopalidae) in the Western United States: New Host Records, Host-Plant Range, and Comments on Use of the Term 'Host Plant'
- Author
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A. G. Wheeler
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,biology ,Host (biology) ,Erodium botrys ,Chamaesyce ,biology.organism_classification ,food ,Insect Science ,Erodium cicutarium ,Botany ,Sphaeralcea ambigua ,Machaeranthera tanacetifolia ,Liorhyssus hyalinus ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Rhopalidae - Abstract
Liorhyssus hyalinus (F.) is a nearly cosmopolitan, polyphagous rhopalid, or scentless plant bug, that feeds mainly on flowers, fruits, and seeds of its hosts. Adults are known from numerous plants in diverse families, whereas nymphs develop on fewer species. Thirteen species of host plants were recorded for L. hyalinus during the sampling of grasses, forbs, subshrubs, and shrubs in the western United States (west of 100th meridian) from 2000 to 2015. The 11 new host records are Lygodesmia juncea, Machaeranthera tanacetifolia, Sonchus asper, Stephanomeria exigua, S. pauciflora, and S. thurberi (Asteraceae); Chamaesyce albomarginata (Euphorbiaceae); Erodium botrys and E. texanum (Geraniaceae); and Malva parviflora and Sphaeralcea ambigua (Malvaceae). The most common host (9 collections) was the adventive Erodium cicutarium, previously reported as a host in the Old World. Another previously known host was Sonchus oleraceus. Hosts of L. hyalinus in western states comprise four principal groups: late...
- Published
- 2016
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