Trioza Acuminata
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Trioza Acuminata
''Trioza'' is the type genus of sap-sucking bugs in the family Triozidae; it has a world-wide distribution. Species The Global Biodiversity Information Facility lists:Global Biodiversity Information Facility: ''Trioza'' Förster, 1848
(retrieved 3 February 2025)
# ''Trioza abdominalis'' # ''Trioza achilleae'' # ''Trioza acuminata'' # ''Trioza acuminatissima'' # ''Trioza acuta'' # ''Trioza adventicia'' # ''Trioza agrophila'' # ''Trioza aguacate'' # ''Trioza albifrons'' # ''Trioza alifumosa'' # ''Trioza alipellucida'' # ''Trioza alniphylli'' # ''Trioza alseuosmiae'' # ''Trioza amamiosimensis'' # ''Trioza analis'' # ''Trioza anamalaiensis'' # ''Trioza anceps'' # ''Trioza anomalicornis'' # ''Trioza anthrisci'' # ''Trioza apartata'' # ''Trioza apoensis'' # ''Trioza apulica'' ...
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Trioza Adventicia
''Trioza adventicia'', commonly known as the syzygium leaf psyllid, lillypilly psyllid, or eugenia psyllid, is a sap-sucking hemipteran bug in the family Triozidae which creates galls on the leaves of ''Syzygium paniculatum''. This species is native to eastern Australia and has been introduced into California, southern Australia, and New Zealand. The nymphs form pit galls in the leaves and stunt the plant's growth. ''Trioza adventicia'' was for decades identified as ''Trioza eugeniae'' Froggatt 1901 in the ornamental plant industry, in the field of biological pest control in the United States, and in its native eastern Australia, resulting in a large body of academic literature—and an even larger number of horticultural resources—using the latter name for the present species. Using multiple lines of morphology (biology), morphological evidence and DNA barcoding, a 2019 study confirmed that ''T. adventicia'' and ''T. eugeniae'' are distinct species, and determined that the wid ...
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