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Definition of Genus aphrophora
1. Noun. A genus of Cercopidae.
Generic synonyms: Arthropod Genus
Group relationships: Cercopidae, Family Cercopidae
Member holonyms: Pine Spittlebug, Aphrophora Saratogensis, Saratoga Spittlebug
Lexicographical Neighbors of Genus Aphrophora
Literary usage of Genus aphrophora
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Biological Bulletin by Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.) (1915)
"... stages is a feature common to both species of this genus, and distinguishing
it from the species of the genus Aphrophora. ..."
2. A Study of the Spermatogenesis of Twenty-two Speci of the Membracidæ by Alice M. Boring (1907)
"... the same genus. Aphrophora 4-notata has 14 chromosomes for the reduced number (Fig.
250) and consequently 14 in half of the second spermatocytes (Fig. ..."
3. The New England Farmer by Samuel W. Cole (1869)
"In that valuable magazine for July, we find the following reply :— The frog-spittle
insects belong to the genus Aphrophora in the ..."
4. Biological Bulletin by Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.) (1915)
"... stages is a feature common to both species of this genus, and distinguishing
it from the species of the genus Aphrophora. ..."
5. An Introduction to Entomology by John Henry Comstock, Anna Botsford Comstock (1888)
"Our more common species of spittle-insects belong to the genus Aphrophora.
They are mostly brownish insects, and are variously banded and spotted. ..."
6. Psyche: A Journal of Entomology by Cambridge Entomological Club (1890)
"... small species of rhynchota closely allied to the genus Aphrophora and belonging
probably to the genus ..."
7. A Study of the Spermatogenesis of Twenty-two Speci of the Membracidæ by Alice M. Boring (1907)
"... the same genus. Aphrophora 4-notata has 14 chromosomes for the reduced number (Fig.
250) and consequently 14 in half of the second spermatocytes (Fig. ..."
8. The New England Farmer by Samuel W. Cole (1869)
"In that valuable magazine for July, we find the following reply :— The frog-spittle
insects belong to the genus Aphrophora in the ..."
9. An Introduction to Entomology by John Henry Comstock, Anna Botsford Comstock (1888)
"Our more common species of spittle-insects belong to the genus Aphrophora.
They are mostly brownish insects, and are variously banded and spotted. ..."
10. Psyche: A Journal of Entomology by Cambridge Entomological Club (1890)
"... small species of rhynchota closely allied to the genus Aphrophora and belonging
probably to the genus ..."