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LeeAnne 11-08-2004 06:43 PM

A bug ID this time...
 
Again, no picture yet ...

Bright green little suckers, maybe .25-.50 of an inch long. Their wings are
folded upward (like a lacewing) and are not against the body like a fly or
most bees. The closest I can come is a buffalo tree hopper, but unless they
are young ones and will change considerably when they get to be adults, then
that's not it. They do fly, sorta. They'll hop off a plant and then fly
their way to another (fast little suckers, I was trying to catch one!)

LeeAnne
-zone 5, north of Boston-



JMagerl 11-08-2004 08:19 PM

A bug ID this time...
 
katydid nymph?

"LeeAnne" wrote in message
...
Again, no picture yet ...

Bright green little suckers, maybe .25-.50 of an inch long. Their wings

are
folded upward (like a lacewing) and are not against the body like a fly or
most bees. The closest I can come is a buffalo tree hopper, but unless

they
are young ones and will change considerably when they get to be adults,

then
that's not it. They do fly, sorta. They'll hop off a plant and then fly
their way to another (fast little suckers, I was trying to catch one!)

LeeAnne
-zone 5, north of Boston-





LeeAnne 12-08-2004 07:31 PM

A bug ID this time...
 
Darnit, no - my critters are not so grasshopper like. Take away the long
antennae, the creepy hoppy back legs and hump up the back more.
I'll try to get one to sit still long enough for a photo opp.

Thank you,
LeeAnne

"JMagerl" wrote in message
...
katydid nymph?




Leon Fisk 13-08-2004 06:59 PM

A bug ID this time...
 
On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 13:43:53 -0400, "LeeAnne"
wrote:

Again, no picture yet ...

Bright green little suckers, maybe .25-.50 of an inch long. Their wings are
folded upward (like a lacewing) and are not against the body like a fly or
most bees. The closest I can come is a buffalo tree hopper, but unless they
are young ones and will change considerably when they get to be adults, then
that's not it. They do fly, sorta. They'll hop off a plant and then fly
their way to another (fast little suckers, I was trying to catch one!)

Hi LeeAnne,

It sounds like some kind of Treehopper, there are others
besides the Buffalo you mentioned.

See:

http://www.inhs.uiuc.edu/~dietrich/treehome.html

http://www.bugguide.net/node/view/174

http://or.essortment.com/treehoppers_raqh.htm

Treehoppers (Hemiptera: Cicadomorpha: Membracoidea)

--
Leon Fisk
Grand Rapids MI/Zone 5b
Remove no.spam for email

LeeAnne 16-08-2004 09:08 PM

Actually, I've discovered that it is a 'small green leafhopper'

Not really scientific I know:
http://home.att.net/~larvalbugbio/homoptera.html
2nd picture down on the right side of page, 'small green leafhopper on
prickly pear cactus pad'

I'll have to look in my bug book again, I don't see how I could have missed
it, hmmm.

"Leon Fisk" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 13:43:53 -0400, "LeeAnne"
wrote:

Again, no picture yet ...

Bright green little suckers, maybe .25-.50 of an inch long. Their wings

are
folded upward (like a lacewing) and are not against the body like a fly

or
most bees. The closest I can come is a buffalo tree hopper, but unless

they
are young ones and will change considerably when they get to be adults,

then
that's not it. They do fly, sorta. They'll hop off a plant and then fly
their way to another (fast little suckers, I was trying to catch one!)

Hi LeeAnne,

It sounds like some kind of Treehopper, there are others
besides the Buffalo you mentioned.

See:

http://www.inhs.uiuc.edu/~dietrich/treehome.html

http://www.bugguide.net/node/view/174

http://or.essortment.com/treehoppers_raqh.htm

Treehoppers (Hemiptera: Cicadomorpha: Membracoidea)

--
Leon Fisk
Grand Rapids MI/Zone 5b
Remove no.spam for email





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