Disonycha
Disonycha is a genus of flea beetles in the family Chrysomelidae. There are at least 30 described species in Disonycha.[1][2][3][4][5]
Disonycha | |
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Disonycha alternata | |
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Genus: | Disonycha Chevrolat in Dejean, 1836 |
Species
- Disonycha abbreviata
- Disonycha admirabila Blatchley, 1924
- Disonycha alabamae Schaeffer, 1919
- Disonycha alternata (Illiger, 1807) (striped willow leaf beetle)
- Disonycha antennata Jacoby, 1884
- Disonycha arizonae Casey, 1884
- Disonycha balsbaughi Blake, 1970
- Disonycha barberi Blake, 1951
- Disonycha brevicornis Schaeffer, 1931
- Disonycha caroliniana (Fabricius, 1775)
- Disonycha chlorotica (Olivier, 1808)
- Disonycha collata (Fabricius, 1801)
- Disonycha conjugata (Fabricius, 1801)
- Disonycha discoidea (Fabricius, 1792) (passionflower flea beetle)
- Disonycha figurata Jacoby, 1884
- Disonycha fumata (J. L. LeConte, 1858)
- Disonycha funerea (Randall, 1838)
- Disonycha glabrata (Fabricius, 1775) (pigweed flea beetle)
- Disonycha latifrons Schaeffer, 1919
- Disonycha latiovittata Hatch in Hatch and Beller, 1932
- Disonycha leptolineata Blatchley, 1917
- Disonycha limbicollis (J. L. LeConte, 1857)
- Disonycha maritima Mannerheim, 1843
- Disonycha pensylvanica (Illiger, 1807)
- Disonycha pluriligata (J. L. LeConte, 1858)
- Disonycha politula Horn, 1889
- Disonycha procera Casey, 1884
- Disonycha punctigera (J. L. LeConte, 1859)
- Disonycha schaefferi Blake, 1933
- Disonycha semicarbonata (J. L. LeConte, 1859)
- Disonycha spilotrachela Blake, 1928
- Disonycha stenosticha Schaeffer, 1931
- Disonycha tenuicornis Horn, 1889
- Disonycha triangularis (Say, 1824) (three-spotted flea beetle)
- Disonycha uniguttata (Say, 1824)
- Disonycha varicornis Horn, 1889
- Disonycha weisei Csiki, 1939
- Disonycha weismani Blake, 1957
- Disonycha xanthomelas (Dalman, 1823) (spinach flea beetle)
gollark: I don't know, but generally I lean toward the view that once a technology is reasonably practical to make with existing technology of the time, and it's useful for something, someone will make it.
gollark: Amongst some subset of the population to be fair, not *all* of it.
gollark: Consider conspiracy theories. They are very stupid. They aren't very good for you to hold, as they may make you increasingly wrong about things. Yet they spread well.
gollark: I'm not convinced that the "if it alone leads to the development of modern science" thing is true, and I still don't agree regardless of that.
gollark: In any case, "spreads better than competitors" doesn't make it "better" in some way *for you to hold*.
References
- "Disonycha Genus Information". BugGuide.net. Retrieved 31 January 2018.
- "Disonycha Report". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 31 January 2018.
- White, Richard E. (1968). A Review of the Genus Cryptocephalus in America North of Mexico. Smithsonian Institution Press.
- "North American Cryptocephalus species (Chrysomelidae, Cryptocephalinae)". Texas Entomology. Mike Quinn. Retrieved 31 January 2018.
- Nie R-E, Bezděk J, Yang X-K (2017). "How many genera and species of Galerucinae s. str. do we know? Updated statistics (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae). In: Chaboo CS, Schmitt M (Eds) Research on Chrysomelidae 7". ZooKeys 720: 91-102.
- Riley, Edward G., Shawn M. Clark, and Terry N. Seeno (2003). "Catalog of the leaf beetles of America north of Mexico (Coleoptera: Megalopodidae, Orsodacnidae and Chrysomelidae, excluding Bruchinae)". Coleopterists Society Special Publication no. 1, 290.
Further reading
- Arnett, R. H. Jr., M. C. Thomas, P. E. Skelley and J. H. Frank. (eds.). (21 June 2002). American Beetles, Volume II: Polyphaga: Scarabaeoidea through Curculionoidea. CRC Press LLC, Boca Raton, Florida ISBN 978-0-8493-0954-0.
- Arnett, Ross H. (2000). American Insects: A Handbook of the Insects of America North of Mexico. CRC Press.
- Richard E. White. (1983). Peterson Field Guides: Beetles. Houghton Mifflin Company.
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