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PSYLLIDS |
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| Psyllids
or 'jumping plant lice' (Hemiptera - Psylloidea) often look like small
cicada. The adults can often jump and fly. The real galls are caused sap
sucking larvae who inject a liquid. |
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| Livia
junci
(juncorum) ocauses attractive, often pink coloured rosettes on
many species of Juncus. |
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| Psyllopsis
fraxini or P. discrepans are psyllids
causing galls on the leaves of Fraxinus excelsior. The galls
cannot be distinguished. The gallers can be distinguished on base of the
nymphs. The edge of the leaf curles down and the cells become enlarged
strongly. The gall coloures pale green, wite, pink and is often with red
or purple veins. |
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| Trichochermes
walkeri causes a thickened and rolled leaf margin of buckthorn,
Rhamnus cathartica. The roll is about 0,5 by 2 cm and pale
green and contains blue waxy aphids. It is not a very common species
in the Netherlands. In Amen, Drenthe, I saw some galls on a small group
of R. cathartica. |
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(Picture:
R.J. Koops)


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| Trioza
remota is a rather common psyllid on the leafs of oak, Quercus
robur and Q. petraea. At the upper surface a small pustule
is visible where at the under side of the leaf is a small dimple with
the nimph of the psyllid in its centre. |
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