Cicadidae Latreille, 1802

Moulds, MS, 2005, An Appraisal of the Higher Classification of Cicadas (Hemiptera: Cicadoidea) with Special Reference to the Australian Fauna, Records of the Australian Museum 57 (3), pp. 375-446 : 427

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3853/j.0067-1975.57.2005.1447

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8233549

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F71539-4842-FFC4-EE16-FF7EFEB6659E

treatment provided by

Felipe (2021-08-21 21:41:36, last updated 2024-11-28 22:01:37)

scientific name

Cicadidae Latreille, 1802
status

 

Family Cicadidae Latreille, 1802 View in CoL View at ENA

Cicadae auct.

Cicadides auct.

Cicadidae View in CoL auct.

Cicadina View in CoL auct.

Cicadinae View in CoL auct.

For discussion on the authorship of family group names based on Cicada see notes under “ Cicadidae / Cicadinae Latreille, 1802 ”, p. 387.

Type genus. Cicada View in CoL L. (type species Cicada orni View in CoL L.).

Included subfamilies. Cicadinae Latreille , Cicadettinae Buckton n.stat., Tettigadinae Distant .

Diagnosis. Thoracic ganglia fused. Pronotum smaller than mesonotum; paramedian and lateral fissures present; pronotal collar present. Mesonotum with a cruciform elevation. Fore wing vein RP arising from node; veins 2A and 3A fused; nodal line usually indistinct. Hind wing hamulus absent. Pretarsal empodia absent. Hind coxae not overhanging abdomen. Timbals present in males only. Male abdominal resonant chamber present. Tympana present in both sexes. Male sternite VIII shielding genitalia ventrally. Male genitalia with styles absent; basal lobe present; aedeagus never with a sclerotized subdorsal crest. Male reproductive system with testes located posteriorly, centred over abdominal sternite VI. Female genitalia either monotrysian or ditrysian. Female reproductive system with accessory glands of common oviduct present. Nymphs with antennal segments 1 (scape) and 2 (pedicel) together longer than segment 5 (3rd flagellomere); fore femur with no midlateral spine on outer face; fore tibiae subapical tooth absent or weakly developed and not opposing apical tooth; mid and hind tibiae with no stout spines along shank; hind tibiae with spines of spinal crown all similar.

Distinguishing characters. The following attributes are believed to differentiate the Cicadidae . Pronotum smaller than mesonotum; paramedian and lateral fissures present; pronotal collar present. Mesonotum with scutellum forming a cruciform elevation. Fore wing vein RP arising from node; veins 2A and 3A fused. Timbals present in males only or sometimes absent. Male abdominal resonant chamber present. Tympana present in both sexes. Male sternite VIII shielding genitalia ventrally. Male genitalia with basal lobes present. Male reproductive system with testes located posteriorly, centred over spiracles of sternite VI. Female reproductive system with accessory glands of common oviduct present. Nymphs with antennal segments 1 (scape) and 2 (pedicel) together longer than segment 5 (3rd flagellomere); fore femur with no mid-lateral spine on outer face; fore tibiae subapical tooth absent or weakly developed and not opposing apical tooth; mid and hind tibiae with no spines along shank; hind tibiae with spines of spinal crown all similar.

Discussion. The previously held concept of the Cicadidae remains unchanged. Previously identified attributes for the Cicadidae ( Hayashi, 1984; Moulds, 1990) remain applicable.

Hayashi, M., 1984. A review of the Japanese Cicadidae. Cicada (Transactions of the Japanese Cicada Club) 5 (2 / 3 / 4): 25 - 51.

Latreille, P. A., 1802. Histoire naturelle, generale et particuliere des Crustaces et des Insectes. Ouvrage faisant suite aux oeuvres de Laclerc de Buffon et partie du cours complet d'Histoire naturelle redige p. C. S. Sonnini. Paris: Dufart. 3, Familles naturelles et genres. xii, 467 pp.

Moulds, M. S., 1990. Australian Cicadas. Kensington: New South Wales University Press. 217 pp., 24 pls.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

SuperFamily

Cicadoidea

Family

Cicadidae