Unidentified Coreid Eggs and Hatchlings
Key to the subfamilies and tribes of the New World Coreidae (Hemiptera) with a checklist of published keys to genera and species By Packauskas R.J. Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash. 96: 44‒53, 1994
Contributed by v belov on 16 October, 2013 - 8:41am |
Catalog of the Coreidae, or Leaf-Footed Bugs, of the New World By Richard Packauskas Fort Hays State University, 2010
Fort Hays Studies, Fourth Series, Number 5.
Contributed by drswanny on 28 July, 2011 - 9:15am |
A synopsis of the Coreoidea (Heteroptera) of Michigan By Swanson D.R. The Great Lakes Entomologist 44: 139-162, 2011
practical keys to 25 spp. of 3 families are provided that are applicable to much wider territory.
sound faunal work, with several new state records.
Contributed by v belov on 19 May, 2012 - 2:26am |
Three new species of Heteroptera (Hemiptera: Rhopalidae, Rhyparochromidae) from Western North America By Scudder G.G.E. Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash. 110: 1202‒1211, 2008
Contributed by v belov on 19 September, 2019 - 12:45pm |
True Bugs (Heteroptera) of the Neotropics By Panizzi A.R., Grazia J., eds. Springer. xxii+901 pp., 2015
Contributed by v belov on 3 December, 2023 - 7:04pm |
True bugs of the world (Hemiptera, Heteroptera): classification and natural history By Schuh R.T., Weirauch C. Siri Scientific Press, Manchester. 800 pp., 2020
Contributed by v belov on 13 October, 2023 - 7:50pm |
New state and provincial records for some nearctic true bugs (Hem.:Heteroptera) from the Ill. Nat.Hist. Survey Insect Collection By Swanson D.R. Great Lakes Entomol. 54: 104‒142, 2021
Contributed by v belov on 11 August, 2023 - 5:50pm |
New United States records for five Heteroptera (Berytidae, Cydnidae, Miridae) from Arizona and New Mexico By Henry, T. J. and J. T. Botz Entomological Society of Washington, 2023
PROC. ENTOMOL. SOC. WASH.
124(4), 2022, pp. 784–794
Abstract.—Five Heteroptera from Arizona/New Mexico are reported new to the
United States: Pronotacantha armata Štusák [Berytidae], Tominotus hogenhoferi
(Signoret) [Cydnidae], and Calocorisca tenera Distant, Fulvius atratus Distant, and
Macrolophus saileri Carvalho [Miridae]. Reviews of the pertinent literature, distribution
records, and known host information are provided and color habitus images
and diagnoses of each species are presented to facilitate identification.
Contributed by Jason Botz on 4 August, 2023 - 1:50pm |
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