Anagrus (Anagrus) erythroneurae S. Trjapitzin & Chiappini, 1994
Anagrus erythroneurae S. Trjapitzin & Chiappini, 1994: 137 . Holotype ♀ (USNM). TL: USA, California, Riverside Co., Coachella. Corbett & Rosenheim, 1996a: 156 (overwintering refuges); Triapitsyn, 2000a: 214 (comparison with A. ustulatus Haliday); Williams III & Martinson, 2000: 139 (hosts, overwintering sites); Martinson et al., 2001: 227 (insecticide and fungicide toxicity); Triapitsyn, 2001: 276 (comparison with extralimital species); Morse & Stouthamer, 2005: 375 (distribution); Prischmann et al., 2005: 132 (managed and unmanaged vineyards); Riddick, 2005a: 63 (ovigeny index); de León et al., 2006b: 42 (molecular phylogram); de León et al., 2006d: 54 (molecular phylogram); de León et al., 2006e: 56 (molecular species boundaries); Morse & Stouthamer, 2006: 96 (molecular identification); Jepsen et al., 2007: 722 (effect of sulphur on biocontrol); Lowery et al., 2007: 11 (host plant associations); Prischmann et al., 2007: 43 (abundance, phenology on blackberry and wild rose); Jepsen et al., 2007: 600 (sulphur effect on reproduction); Lowery et al., 2007: 9 (host plant, distribution); Morse & Stouthamer, 2007: 95 (molecular identification); Wright & James, 2007: 19 (host plant, distribution); de León et al., 2008a: 99 (barcode); de León et al., 2008b: 20 (molecular, morphometric analysis); Segoli & Rosenheim, 2013b: 2499 (reproductive success); Segoli, 2016: 140 (density dependent parasitism); Wilson et al., 2016: 602 (leafhopper and plant hosts in CA); Wilson & Triapitsyn, 2017: 53 (mention).
Anagrus epos biotype: Pickett et al., 1987: 15 (biological control); González, 1988: 476 (biological control); Pickett et al., 1989: 554 (biological control).
Anagrus sp. B: Trjapitzin, 1995: 250 (previously misidentifications, as epos in part).
Anagrus epos: Martinson & Dennehy, 1995: 557 (misidentification, host, distribution).
Anagrus (Anagrus) erythroneurae: Chiappini et al., 1996: 558 (key), 570 (description); Triapitsyn, 1998: 81 (key), 84 (hosts, distribution); Triapitsyn, 2015b: 10 (key), 21 (description, distribution).
Nearctic hosts. Cicadellidae: Dikrella cockerelli (Gillette), D. spp. [most probably including D. californica (Lawson) and D. cruentata (Gillette)], Edwardsiana prunicola (Edwards), Erasmoneura variabilis (Beamer), Erythroneura bistrata McAtee, E. comes (Say), E. elegantula Osborn, Zonocyba pomaria (McAtee) .
Distribution. Canada: BC. USA: CA, MN, NM, NY, WA.