Insects Database
Insects
 Ants
 Arachnids
 Bees
 Beetles
 Booklice - Barkflies
 Bugs
 Bumblebees
 Cicadas
 Crane flies
 Dragonflies
 Earwigs
 Flies
 Isopods
 Locusts
 Mosquitoes
 Moths & Butterflies
 Plant-parasitic Hemipterans
 Praying Mantises
 Wasps


Photography with cameras
Nikon D3x, Nikon D300, Canon 50D
Image editing with Photoshop
Webdesign @ Pixel-Partisan.com

Keyword: Rhopalus


Overview - a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z

Seite 1 von 1     
Scentless plant bugs
...ubfamilies (Rhopalinae and Serinethinae). The subfamily Rhopalinae includes the tribes Rhopalini, Chorosomini, Harmostini and Niestrheini. The genera Arhyssus, Aufeius, Brachycarenus, Corizus, Chorosoma, Harmostes, Liorhyssus, Myrmus, Niesthrea, Rhopalus and Stictopleurus belong to these 4 tribes. Species from these genera are: Brachycarenus tigrinus, Chorosoma schillingi, Corizus lateralis, Corizus scutatus, Corizus viridicatus, Corizus miriformis, Corizus crassicornis, Corizus bohemanii, Corizus ...

...scutatus, Corizus viridicatus, Corizus miriformis, Corizus crassicornis, Corizus bohemanii, Corizus indentatus, Corizus scotti, Corizus hyalinus, Corizus hyoscyami, Harmostes reflexulus, Liorhyssus hyalinus, Myrmus miriformis, Niesthrea louisianica, Rhopalus tigrinus, Rhopalus maculatus, Rhopalus parumpunctatus, Rhopalus subrufus, Stictopleurus cf. pictus, Stictopleurus abutilon, Stictopleurus punctatonervosus and Stictopleurus crassicornis. The subfamily soapberry bugs (Serinethinae) includes the genera Boisea, Jadera and Leptocoris with, for example, these spe...
>> Bugs -> Scentless plant bugs
Rhopalus subrufus
Rhopalus subrufus belong to the genus Rhopalus, in the order Hemiptera and Rhynchota (true bugs, cicadas, hoppers, aphids and allies), the suborder true/typical bugs (Heteroptera), the infraorder Pentatomorpha, the superfamily Coreoidea, the family Rhopalidae, the subfamily Rhopalinae and th...

...ptera and Rhynchota (true bugs, cicadas, hoppers, aphids and allies), the suborder true/typical bugs (Heteroptera), the infraorder Pentatomorpha, the superfamily Coreoidea, the family Rhopalidae, the subfamily Rhopalinae and the tribe Rhopalini. Rhopalus subrufus are widespread and relatively common in Europe, America and Asia (south of the Arctic Circle) and also occur in Africa southwards to the tropics. This species is not endangered.
>> Bugs -> Scentless plant bugs -> Rhopalus subrufus
By spring or early summer, Rhopalus subrufus have reached sexual maturity and mate. The fertilized females lay their eggs on the underside of the leaves of the preferred food plants of the larvae. The larvae feed on these leaves for about 4 to 5 weeks after hatching (usually in the m...

... of the leaves of the preferred food plants of the larvae. The larvae feed on these leaves for about 4 to 5 weeks after hatching (usually in the month of August);later they feed on the fruit. Theygo through 5 stages of development up to autumn time. Rhopalus subrufus overwinter in frost free places in the soil or under leaves.
>> Bugs -> Scentless plant bugs -> Rhopalus subrufus
Rhopalus subrufus reach body lengths of 7-8.5 mm. Their reddish-brown bodies are elongated and widen at the hind end. The reddish-brown to yellowish-brown head is much wider than it is long and bears the large compound eyes and easily recognizable simple ...
>> Bugs -> Scentless plant bugs -> Rhopalus subrufus
Rhopalus subrufus are diurnal and active from April (or June on and prefer habitats like forest edges, clearings, uncut lawns, meadows, roadsides and banks of water where they particularly favour grass and geranium plants. Their life span is 6-8 months.
>> Bugs -> Scentless plant bugs -> Rhopalus subrufus
Query: Rhopalus subrufus
Rhopalus subrufus
>> Picture
Query: Rhopalus subrufus
Rhopalus subrufus
>> Picture


Quick search: Bugs - Brown - True - Leaves - Species - Genera
Plant - Subfamily - Plants - Infraorder - Rhynchota - Family - Yellowish - Reddish
Keywords
abcdefghijklm
nopqrstuvwxyz
German Flag German
 Contact
 Copyrights
 Imprint
 New pictures
 Unknown insects
 Unknown spiders
Frequent Queries: