Key to the species of Clivinema with descriptions of seven new species (Hemiptera, Miridae)
By Knight, H. H. Biological Society of Washington, 1928
Knight, H. H., 1928. Key to the species of Clivinema with descriptions of seven new species (Hemiptera, Miridae). Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 41: 31-36.
Knight, H.H. (1927) New species and a new genus of Deraeocorinae from North America (Hemiptera, Miridea). Bulletin of the Brooklyn Entomological Society 22: 136-143.
The present paper describes two new species and a variety of Deraeocoris, two new species of Eustictus, two new species of Eurychilopterella, and a new genus and species allied to Eurychilopterella, all belonging to the Mirid subfamily Deraeocorinae.
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 26 April, 2023 - 9:40am
Review of the Eurychilopterella complex of genera, including the description of a new genus from Mexico
By Gary M. Stonedahl, J. D. Lattin and V. Razafimahatrat American Museum of Natural History, 1997
American Museum Novitates 3198
Provides genus key to Deraeocorini, species key to Eurychilopterella, and descriptions and illustrations of species of the genera Conocephalocoris, Eurychilopterella, Hesperophylum, Diplozona, etc.
Johnston, H.G. (1929) A partial list of Miridae from Texas (Order Hemiptera). Bulletin of the Brooklyn Entomological Society 24: 217-219.
The following is a partial list of Mirids collected principally by the writer, in the vicinity of College Station, Texas, during the spring and summer, 1928. But little is known of the distribution of the family Miridae in the southwestern part of the United States, thus the following notes might prove of interest. Specimens have been determined by the writer and verified by Dr.
Polhemus, D.A. (1994) An annotated checklist of the plant bugs of Colorado (Heteroptera: Miridae). Pan-Pacific Entomologist 70(2): 122-147.
Abstract
Based on literature records and recent collections, 513 species of Miridae, or plant bugs, are recorded in a checklist for Colorado. If allowances are made for misidentifications and unconfirmed records this total drops to 470 species, which is still the largest number of mirid species reported from any state in the U.S.A. Of these species, 7 are introductions, and 22 are Holarctic species indigenous to North America. Annotations are provided in the checklist giving information on counties of occurrence, host plant records, Colorado type localities, and instances of Holarctic or introduced species. Cases where the listing of a species in the state may be potentially erroneous due to misidentification or taxonomic uncertainty are noted.