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Aphrophora alni
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Aphrophora alni, the European alder spittle bug, is a species belonging to the family .


Distribution
This species is quite common and widespread. It is present in most of , in the eastern , in the , and in . Fauna europaea It is naturalized in North America.Andrew Hamilton: The Spittlebuqs of Canada (Homoptera, Cercopidae). The Insects and Arachnids of Canada, Part 10. Biosystematics Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Research Branch Agriculture Canada, Publication 1740. Ottawa 1982.


Habitat
These 'froghoppers' inhabit dry and moist habitats of lowlands and mountainous areas, forest edges, hedgerows, meadows, gardens and parks, from the lowlands up to mountains at an elevation up to above sea level.H. Nickel: The leafhoppers and planthoppers of Germany (Hemiptera, Auchenorrhyncha): Patterns and strategies in a highly diverse group of phytophagous insects. Pensoft, Sofia and Moskau, 2003,


Description
The adults of these large 'froghoppers' reach of length, British Bugs the females are usually slightly larger than the males. The basic coloration of the body is usually brown. Their front wings wear two distinct clear patches on the margins. Head and pronotum have a median keel. The head has a pair of compound eyes and two simple eyes (). The legs are strongly developed and fit to jump. Tibiae of the rear pair of legs carry several spines.Walter J. Le Quesne: Handbooks for the identification of British Insects. Vol. II. part 2 (a). Hemiptera. Cicadomorpha (excluding Deltocephalinae and Typhlocybinae). Londyn: Royal Entomological Society of London, 1965, s. 8-11.Bob Gibbons FIELD GUIDE TO INSECTS OF BRITAIN AND NORTHERN EUROPE


Biology
They can be encountered from May through October on bushes and on several species of trees, especially willows ( species), birch ( species), alder ( species) and poplar ( species).). Aphrophora alni is a species, meaning it feeds on several kind of plants. The adults primarily feed on deciduous trees, while larvae prefer herbaceous plants (). Commanster

To lay eggs, the females migrate to the herb layers. The eggs overwinter and hatch the larvae in the following spring. The larvae live in stems and leaves of herbaceous plants inside the typical foam nest, that protects them against enemies and provide necessary moisture and temperature for their development. Aphrophora alni has only one generation a year.


Gallery
Image:Aphrophora alni mating.jpg|Mating Image:Aphrophora alni.jpg| Image:Aphrophoraalni Ausschnitt.jpg| File:Aphrophora alni - 2012-07-22.webm|Clip


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