Dictionary Definition
leafhopper n : small leaping insect that sucks
the juices of plants
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Extensive Definition
Leafhopper is a common name applied to any
species from the family
Cicadellidae. Leafhoppers, also known as hoppers, are minute
plant-feeding insects in
the superfamily
Membracoidea
in the order Hemipterahttp://www.tolweb.org/Membracoidea/10830.
Recent classification within the Hemiptera has placed the members
of the archaic "Homoptera" into two new suborders: Sternorrhyncha
(aphids, whiteflies, scales, psyllids...) and Auchenorrhyncha
(cicadas, leafhoppers, treehoppers, planthoppers...). The name
Auchenorrhyncha is itself likely to be replaced, as research
indicates it is not a monophyletic group.
Leafhoppers are found all over the world, and it
is the second largest family in the Hemiptera; there are at least
20,000 described species. Leafhoppers have piercing sucking
mouthparts, they feed on plant sap and can transmit plant-infecting
viruses and bacteria. Species that are significant agricultural
pests include the potato
leafhopper, beet
leafhopper, white
apple leafhopper, two-spotted
leafhopper, and glassy-winged
sharpshooter. A Leafhoppers' diet commonly consists of plant
sap from a wide and diverse range of plants. Leafhoppers mainly
consume vegetation but have been known to indulge in small insects
such as Aphids.
The Cicadellidae combine the following features:
- thickened part of the antennae very short and ending with a bristle (arista)
- two simple eyes (ocelli) present on the top or front of the head
- tarsi made of three segments
- front femora with at most weak spines
- hind tibia with one or more distinct keels, with a row of movable spines on each, sometimes on enlarged bases
- base of middle legs close together where they originate under the thorax
- front wings not particularly thickened. An additional, unique character of leafhoppers is the production of brochosomes which are thought to protect egg masses from predation and pathogens. Leafhoppers are susceptible to various pathogens; viruses as in the(Dicistroviridae), bacteria, fungi, as well as having a host of parasitoids which attack the eggs.
Leafhoppers are often responsible for the spread
of plant
pathogens espicially viruses and
phytoplasmas. In
some cases these plant pathogens are also pathogens of the insect
themselves, and can replicate within the salivary
glands.
leafhopper in French: Cicadellidae
leafhopper in Italian: Cicadellidae
leafhopper in Lithuanian: Cikadėlės
leafhopper in Hungarian: Mezeikabóca-félék
leafhopper in Japanese: ヨコバイ
leafhopper in Norwegian: Dvergsikader
leafhopper in Slovenian: Mali
škržatki