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Ischnodemus sabuleti

Ischnodemus sabuleti
Ischnodemus sabuleti.png
Macropterous adult
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hemiptera
Suborder: Heteroptera
Superfamily: Lygaeoidea
Family: Blissidae
Genus: Ischnodemus
Species: I. sabuleti
Binomial name
Ischnodemus sabuleti
(Fallén, 1826)
Synonyms
  • Lygaeus sabuleti Fallén, 1826
  • Pachymerus decurtatus Herrich-Schaeffer, 1837

Ischnodemus sabuleti, also known as the European chinch bug, is a species of swarming true bug from the family Blissidae, which family also includes the American Chinch Bug Blissus leucopterus. It was first described by Carl Fredrik Fallén in 1826.

Adult bugs are 4-6mm long, very slender elliptical overall and have a black base color. The rear edge of the pronotum, parts of the hemelytra, the tibiae and tarsi, and the tips of the femora, are yellow-brown in colour. The species is dimorphic: some individuals are macropterous (fully winged) and others micropterous (very short winged). The two types are estimated to be roughly equally numerous. A form with wings of intermediate length is occasionally found.Nymphs are of a similar shape with the hind part of the abdomen scarlet.

The species is common in most of mainland Europe and absent only from the far North. It occurs also in the Western North Africa and further East through Eastern Europe to Siberia and the Caucasus. It is widely found in Germany and in places is very numerous. In the South, it is less common than in the North. In Austria, it occurs only in the East.

In the British Isles its history has been one of gradual expansion over many decades. Prior to 1893 it was known only from one site in Surrey; by 1959 it had reached Hampshire, Oxfordshire and Essex; the spread has continued since then and by 2014 it was being reported as far north as Yorkshire and west to parts of Somerset.


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