Primers were developed for leafhoppers of the genus Aphrodes amplifying 84–244 bp fragments of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I gene. DNA was extracted from legs of over 100-year-old archived museum specimens, amplified and sequenced. The fragments contain sufficient variation to unequivocally identify the different species. The majority of the analysed museum specimens, including three specimens of the syntype series for the UK endemic species A. aestuarina (Edwards 1908), were found to have been assigned to the wrong species. This work clearly underlines the need to validate museum specimens using molecular methods where identity is in doubt, based on reliable standards for species discrimination
The number and classification of tribes in the leafhopper subfamily Typhlocybinae are not yet fully ...
Aphids of the subtribe Aphidina are found mainly in the North Temperate Zone. The relative lack of d...
The subfamily Aphrodinae (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) contains ~33 species in Europe within four genera...
Primers were developed for leafhoppers of the genus Aphrodes amplifying 84–244 bp fragments of the m...
Reliable delimitation and identification of species is central not only to systematics, but also to ...
Reliable delimitation and identification of species is central not only to systematics, but also to ...
Eleven microsatellite markers were developed for the leafhoppers of the genus Aphrodes using shotgun...
Reliable host plant records are available for only a small fraction of herbivorous insect species, d...
Background: Many studies have shown the suitability of sequence variation in the 59 region of the mi...
BACKGROUND:Many studies have shown the suitability of sequence variation in the 5' region of the mit...
Ecological and host adapted races provide evidence that evolutionary divergence and sympatric specia...
The fragmentation of DNA in historical specimens is very common, so obtaining sequences that allow m...
Archival specimens are a great resource for molecular research in population biology, taxonomy and c...
International audienceMealybugs (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae) are major pests of a wide range of crops...
Aphids of the subtribe Aphidina are found mainly in the North Temperate Zone. The relative lack of d...
The number and classification of tribes in the leafhopper subfamily Typhlocybinae are not yet fully ...
Aphids of the subtribe Aphidina are found mainly in the North Temperate Zone. The relative lack of d...
The subfamily Aphrodinae (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) contains ~33 species in Europe within four genera...
Primers were developed for leafhoppers of the genus Aphrodes amplifying 84–244 bp fragments of the m...
Reliable delimitation and identification of species is central not only to systematics, but also to ...
Reliable delimitation and identification of species is central not only to systematics, but also to ...
Eleven microsatellite markers were developed for the leafhoppers of the genus Aphrodes using shotgun...
Reliable host plant records are available for only a small fraction of herbivorous insect species, d...
Background: Many studies have shown the suitability of sequence variation in the 59 region of the mi...
BACKGROUND:Many studies have shown the suitability of sequence variation in the 5' region of the mit...
Ecological and host adapted races provide evidence that evolutionary divergence and sympatric specia...
The fragmentation of DNA in historical specimens is very common, so obtaining sequences that allow m...
Archival specimens are a great resource for molecular research in population biology, taxonomy and c...
International audienceMealybugs (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae) are major pests of a wide range of crops...
Aphids of the subtribe Aphidina are found mainly in the North Temperate Zone. The relative lack of d...
The number and classification of tribes in the leafhopper subfamily Typhlocybinae are not yet fully ...
Aphids of the subtribe Aphidina are found mainly in the North Temperate Zone. The relative lack of d...
The subfamily Aphrodinae (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) contains ~33 species in Europe within four genera...