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Hemiptera

Redirected from Homoptera Hemiptera is an order of insects, comprising some 67,500 known species in two suborders, Heteroptera and Homoptera. Originally the Homoptera were treated as a separate order. Members of the Hemiptera, and of the Heteroptera in particular, are sometimes called "true bugs". The name comes from their forewings[?] having both membranous and hard portions. It is also this which gives the order its name, hemiptera, coming from the Latin for half-wing.

Species of order Hemiptera occcur worldwide; they are distinguished from all other insects by both adults and nymphs having piercing and sucking mouthparts housed in a long "beak". These are used mostly to feed on plant juices, but some species are adapted to suck blood from animals or other insects.

Table of contents
1 Suborder Heteroptera
2 Suborder Homoptera

     Suborder Heteroptera  

25,000 known species in over 60 families:

    Suborder Homoptera 

42,500 known species

See also: http://www.kendall-bioresearch.co.uk/hemip1.htm

Series Auchenorryncha

Cicadas and hoppers; 33,000 species in over 30 families.

Series Sternorryncha

12,500 species.

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