A Japanese Leafhopper in Prince George's Co., Maryland (5/23/2012). Determined by Kyle Kittelberger/BugGuide.
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Barbara Thurlow.
A Japanese Leafhopper in Frederick Co., Maryland (7/25/2015). Verified by Kyle Kittleberger/BugGuide.
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Mark Etheridge.
Japanese Leafhopper in Anne Arundel Co., Maryland (Date obscured). (c) Timothy Reichard, all rights reserved.
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Timothy Reichard.
Japanese Leafhopper in Anne Arundel Co., Maryland (7/19/2020). (c) Timothy Reichard, all rights reserved.
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Timothy Reichard.
A Japanese Leafhopper in Baltimore City, Maryland (6/10/2010). Determined by Andy Hamilton/BugGuide.
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Thomas Wilson.
Japanese Leafhopper in Anne Arundel Co., Maryland (7/30/2020). (c) Sergei Drovetski, all rights reserved.
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Sergei Drovetski.
Japanese Leafhopper in Anne Arundel Co., Maryland (Date obscured). (c) Timothy Reichard, all rights reserved.
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Timothy Reichard.
A Japanese Leafhopper in Prince George's Co., Maryland (9/12/2018). Determined by Yurika Alexander and Ken Wolgemuth via BugGuide.
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Jesse Christopherson.
Japanese Leafhopper in Anne Arundel Co., Maryland (11/6/2024). (c) Timothy Reichard, all rights reserved.
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Timothy Reichard.
Japanese Leafhopper in Montgomery Co., Maryland (7/3/2019). (c) Jane Hartman, all rights reserved.
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Jane Hartman.
Orientus ishidae, common name Japanese leafhopper or Mosaic leafhopper, is a species of leafhoppers belonging to the family Cicadellidae and subfamily Deltocephalinae.
The adults reach 4.5–6.5 millimetres (0.18–0.26 in) of length. This leafhopper shows a distinctive mosaic-like pattern on the forewings and an orange band between the eyes. Orientus ishidae is associated with willow (Salix species), hornbeam (Carpinus betulus) and with many woody plants and deciduous trees. It may cause serious leaf damages to several tree species and is implicated as a vector of the phytoplasmicflavescence dorée (FD) disease in vineyards.[2][3] Adults can be found from June to October.
The nymphs are strongly coloured, the patterning is variable. They often adopt a tail-up posture in response to danger, as seen on the left.
^Matsumura S. (1902). "Monographie der Jassinen Japans" [Monograph of the Jassinae of Japan]. Természetrajzi Füzetek (in German). 25. pp. 353-404 (at p. 382).