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Photo#6677
Tibicen robinsonianus - male

Tibicen robinsonianus - Male
Parkwood, Durham County, North Carolina, USA
August 31, 2003
Size: 27 mm body length
Found (freshly) killed on a road in a wooded suburban neighborhood. See comments under this photo regarding uncertain identification:



Body length: 36 mm to wingtips, body length 27 mm, measured in place by photographing adjacent to a scale. (Original statement of 24 mm for body length was in error.)

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Tibicen robinsonianus - male Tibicen robinsonianus - male

Tibicen robinsonianus (Male)
This is not an easily obtained cicada. Although more common than it may appear to be, it is a canopy species and rarely taken at lights. It is also frequently over looked or dissmissed as T. linnei or T. canicularis.

To my knowledge, T. canicularis has not yet been confirmed to occur in NC; thus far it hasn't come across my desk,..not dismissing it, or stating that it does not occur here in NC, I can only claim to have not yet convincingly seen it. I do know that it is rare in Virginia and recorded soley from Appalachia in that state (early 1900's).

In contrast, T. robinsonianus is a more southernly species and frequents the hill country (such haunts as the Piedmont and Cumberland Plateaus of the east and the Ozarks in the west). No doubt it alo occurs in a number of other diverse habitats as it is claimed to be heard rather widely - hinting a greater distribution than I have observed. There are reports/confirmations from the following states: Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia. I am less familiar with more northern records.

In support of this id, I used my experience here in NC, a handful of specimens, and the 1922 original description of T. robinsonianus by Davis.

Note that this cicada has generous amounts of black pigmentation, both dorsally and ventrally, in quantities sufficient to be suggestive of that species (T. robinsonianus); it has a sharply delineated, shiny black, ventral stripe along the midline descriptive of T. robinsonianus (and T. linnei). The dorsal aspect of the abdomen is also a glossy black,..again characteristic of T. linnei and it's "sister sp." T. robinsonianus,... therefore, I lean towards T. robinsonianus as the most likely id.

Refer to Davis' 1922-23 paper from the Journal of the New York Entomological So[1] (pp.36-52)

Moved
Moved from Dog-day Cicada.
Bill Reynolds, of the NC Museum of Natural Sciences, e-mailed me stating he was certain this was Tibicen robinsonianus and not Tibicen canicularis. Certainly this is a tough one to ID!

Moved
Moved from Tibicen.

Beautiful specimen
I wonder if this influenced the US Army on camouflage designs? The pattern is remarkably similar (and I'll bet the cicada had it long before us humans).

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