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Pyrops intricatus

Harmful Effects of Pyrops intricatus

Pyrops intricatus

A species of Lanternflies

Pyrops intricatus poses risks to host plants by piercing and sucking plant fluids, leading to yellowing leaves, wilted stems, and stunted growth. Severe infestations can cause significant yield losses and may transmit plant diseases.

What Type of Pest Is Pyrops intricatus?

Agricultural Pests
Agricultural Pests
Damage Stage
Adults, Nymphs
Host Plants
Longan trees (dimocarpus longan), as well as other fruiting trees
Host Plants Organs
Leaves, Stems
Damage Ways
Sucking Plant Fluids
Damage Reason
Feeding
Damage Level
Mild to Severe
Pyrops intricatus, at both adult and nymph stages, feeds on a variety of host plants by piercing and sucking plant fluids. This can result in yellowing leaves, wilted stems, and overall growth stunting. A severe infestation may lead to significant yield losses and can also act as vectors for plant diseases.
More Insects that are Similar to Pyrops intricatus
Red-nosed lanternfly
Red-nosed lanternfly
Pyrops karenius, also known as the Red-nosed Lanternfly, is a species of planthopper belonging to a group commonly referred to as lantern-flies. This species is found in Burma, Thailand and the Karen Hills of India. The head, its protrusion and the thorax are reddish brown. The cephalic process is slightly recurved and its tip is flattened.
Longan lanternfly
Longan lanternfly
They are often sought-out by collectors, attracted by their fore wings, yellow-orange hind wings with a black zone around the wing tips, a reddish head and cephalic process with white spots.
Watanabe's lanternfly
Watanabe's lanternfly
Adorned with a remarkable protuberance from its head, which is thought to have a role in mate attraction, watanabe's lanternfly boasts a complex communication system that employs substrate-borne vibrations. This skillful climber spends much of its life in the canopies of tropical forests, navigating the foliage with ease as it feeds primarily on the sap from trees, using its specialized mouthparts to pierce plant tissues and extract the nutritious fluids.
Pyrops sultanus
Pyrops sultanus
Dark-horned lanternfly
Dark-horned lanternfly
Pyrops spinolae is a species of planthopper sometimes referred-to as the dark-horned lantern-fly (Vietnamese: ve sầu đầu đen). The species is named after Maximilian Spinola, the authority for the genus. This bug is found from India to Indochina.
Cerogenes auricoma
Cerogenes auricoma
Wax-tailed planthopper
Wax-tailed planthopper
The genus Pterodictya includes Hemiptera of the family Fulgoridae, and the subfamily Phenacinae.
Kalidasa lanata
Kalidasa lanata
Kalidasa lanata is a species of hemipteran insect in the genus Kalidasa of the family Fulgoridae found in South India. They have a slender and flexible stalk-like outgrowth arising from above the tip of the snout.
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