Coreinae Explained
Coreinae[1] is a subfamily in the hemipteran family Coreidae. They have been shown to be paraphyletic with respect to Meropachyinae.[2]
Tribes
The following tribes belong to the Coreinae:
- Acanthocephalini Stål, 1870 - Americas
- Acanthocerini Bergroth, 1913 - Americas
- Acanthocorini Amyot and Serville, 1843 - Africa, Asia, Australia
- Agriopocorini Miller, 1954 - Australia
- Amorbini Stål, 1873 - Australia, New Guinea
- Anhomoeini Hsiao, 1964 - Asian mainland:
- monotypic tribe: Anhomoeus Hsiao, 1963
- Anisoscelidini Laporte, 1832 - Americas, Africa, Europe, Asia
- Barreratalpini Brailovsky, 1988 - central America:
- monotypic tribe: Barreratalpa Brailovsky, 1988
- Chariesterini Stål, 1868 - mostly Americas
- Chelinideini Blatchley, 1926
- monotypic tribe: Chelinidea Uhler, 1863
- Cloresmini Stål, 1873 - SE Asia
- Colpurini Breddin, 1900 - Africa, Asia
- Coreini Leach, 1815 - Africa, Europe, Asia
- Cyllarini Stål, 1873 - tropical Africa, Sri Lanka
- Daladerini Stål, 1873 - Africa, Asia
- Dasynini Bergroth, 1913 - Africa, Asia, Australia
- Discogastrini Stål, 1868 - central and S. America
- Gonocerini (synonym Gonocérates Mulsant & Rey, 1870) - Africa, Europe, Asia, Australia
- Homoeocerini Amyot and Serville, 1843 - Africa, Asia
- Hypselonotini Bergroth, 1913 - Americas
- Latimbini Stål, 1873 - Africa
- Manocoreini Hsiao, 1964 - China
- monotypic tribe: Manocoreus Hsiao, 1964
- Mecocnemini Hsiao, 1964 - China
- monotypic tribe: Mecocnemis Hsiao, 1964
- Mictini Amyot and Serville, 1843 - Africa, Asia
- Nematopodini Amyot and Serville, 1843 - Americas
- Petascelini Stål, 1873 - Africa, Asia
- Phyllomorphini Mulsant and Rey, 1870 - Africa, mainland Europe, Asia
- Pephricus Amyot & Serville, 1843
- Phyllomorpha Laporte, 1833
- Tongorma Kirkaldy, 1900
- Placoscelini Stål, 1868 - central and S. America
- Prionotylini Puton, 1872 - Europe
- monotypic tribe: Prionotylus Fieber, 1860
- Procamptini Ahmad, 1964 - Philippines
- monotypic tribe: Procamptus Bergroth, 1925
- Sinotagini Hsiao, 1963 - China
- monotypic tribe: Sinotagus Kiritshenko, 1916
- Spartocerini Amyot and Serville, 1843 - Americas
Fossil genera
- Ferriantenna Cumming & Le Tirant, 2021 Burmese amber, Myanmar, Cenomanian[3]
- Magnusantenna Du & Chen in Du et al. 2021 Burmese amber, Myanmar, Cenomanian[4]
Notes and References
- http://coreoidea.speciesfile.org/Common/basic/Taxa.aspx?TaxonNameID=1187113 Coreoidea Species File (Version 5.0/5.0)
- Forthman. Michael. Miller. Christine W.. Kimball. Rebecca T.. 2019. Phylogenomic analysis suggests Coreidae and Alydidae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) are not monophyletic. Zoologica Scripta. en. 48. 4. 520–534. 10.1111/zsc.12353. 1463-6409. free.
- Cumming. Royce T.. Tirant. Stephane Le. 2021-06-14. Drawing the Excalibur bug from the stone: adding credibility to the double-edged sword hypothesis of coreid evolution (Hemiptera, Coreidae). ZooKeys. en. 1043. 117–131. 10.3897/zookeys.1043.67730. 34163298. 8217075. 1313-2970. free.
- 2021-01-22. A Cretaceous bug with exaggerated antennae might be a double-edged sword in evolution. iScience. en. 24. 1. 101932. 10.1016/j.isci.2020.101932. 2589-0042. 7773949. Du. Bao-Jie. Chen. Rui. Tao. Wen-Tao. Shi. Hong-Liang. Bu. Wen-Jun. Liu. Ye. Ma. Shuai. Ni. Meng-Ya. Kong. Fan-Li. Xiao. Jin-Hua. Huang. Da-Wei. 33409478.