I was going through some old photos and found these little leaf hoppers
seen from United States

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seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Israel
seen from United States
seen from Israel
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seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

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seen from Israel
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seen from United States
I was going through some old photos and found these little leaf hoppers
Two-lined Spittlebug (Prosapia bicincta)
Leafhoppers come in many varieties of extraordinary colors. Farmers and gardeners don’t like them. There are more leafhopper species worldwide than all species of birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians combined! They’re touchy, run sideways, and are great jumpers so I’ve seen far more of these than I’ve been able to photograph.
William Harper - Evanston, July and August 2020
leaf hopper
Host Coercion
Parasites are an interesting group. Because they rely on other organisms for their survival, they have evolved some amazing strategies at getting what they need. Moving from one host to another can be difficult, especially for parasites specializing on plants. A recent study published in PLOS Biology has shed some light on one interesting strategy. Phytoplasma are bacterial parasites of a variety of plants. In order to get from one plant host to another, these bacteria utilize insect hosts. How they do this is quite incredible. These bacteria produce specialized proteins that have some strange effects on plant tissues. The proteins actually castrate the host plant. They do this by interfering with the proteins responsible for flower development. Instead of producing normal flowers, the plants produce mutated leaf-like structures. You can see an example of a healthy plant on the left and an infected one on the right. So, why does the bacteria do cause such mutations? This is where the insects enter the picture. Researchers found that infected plants that produced these mutated leaf-like structures were more attractive to leaf hoppers. The leaf hoppers readily feed and reproduce on these infected plants at a higher rate than they do healthy plants. In feeding, the leaf hoppers suck up bacteria while they feed on sap. When the leaf hoppers go on to feed on healthy plants, some of the bacteria get transferred in their saliva, thus completing the parasitic lifecycle. This is what parasitologists call "host coercion." The parasite, in this case phytoplasma bacteria, alter their host in some manner that increases the fitness of the parasite. This is one of the first examples in which researchers have been able to identify the exact mechanism by which a parasite makes this happen. Photo Credit: John Innes Centre (https://www.jic.ac.uk/) Further Reading: http://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371%2Fjournal.pbio.1001835
It’s like 80 degrees in my room right now and I can’t even open my window because fucking leaf hoppers keep somehow finding a way in.