The short apical segment of the rostrum identifies the family Derbidae; many adults are recognizable by their habit of holding up their wings.Nymphs of some species feed on fungi while adults live by sucking sap. more info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derbidaeaffects a broad verity of plants: naturalhistory.museumwales.ac.uk/vectors/browsespecies.ph...Proutista moesta ? WESTWOOD,. 1851Genus: Proutista KIRKALDY, 1904Subfamily: OtiocerinaeFamily: Derbidae SPINOLA, 1839 (derbid planthoppers)Superfamily: FulgoroideaInfraorder: Fulgoromorpha (Spitzkopfzikaden)Suborder: AuchenorrhynchaOrder: Hemiptera (true bugs, Schnabelkerfe) Subclass: PterygotaClass: Insecta (insects, Insekten)Subphylum: HexapodaPhylum: ArthropodaIndonesia, W-Java, 10 km S Tangerang: vic. Serpong (Kampung gardens), 45m asl., 12.12.2010(IMG_7864)
Alexander F. Emeljanov, Dmitry E. Shcherbakov
Zookeys
Figures 4–8.4–5 Alicodoxa rasnitsyni gen. et sp. n., 4th instar nymph, Rovno amber: 4 dorsal view, slightly corrected and schematized; on the right, arrangement of sensory pits on the lateral body parts facing ventrad (scale bar, 1 mm) 5 posterior part of the abdomen, arrangement of wax plates and sensory pits; 6–7 Saigona ussuriensis (Lethierry) (Orthopagini), nymphs, recent: 6 5th instar, posterior part of the abdomen with wax plates; inset, upper wax plate of segment VIII, enlarged 7 4th instar, dorsal view; on the right, arrangement of sensory pits on ventrolateral parts of the tergites; 8 Dictyophara pannonica (Germar), 4th instar nymph, recent, dorsal view (apical part of the head not shown; after Emeljanov 1994).