The Cicadas of Florida (Hemiptera: Cicadoidea: Cicadidae)
Author
Sanborn, Allen F.
Author
Phillips, Polly K.
Author
Gilllis, Philip
text
Zootaxa
2008
1916
1
43
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.274559
95be8ece-0676-4e15-872e-05801c9edf88
1175-5326
274559
Diceroprocta viridifascia
(Walker)
(Figs. 12, 25–33)
Cicada viridifascia
Walker, 1850
: 121
.
Type
locality: unknown. The collection locality of the
type
specimen was unknown to Walker.
Holotype
male is in the Natural History Museum, London.
Cicada reperta
Uhler, 1892b
: 177
.
Adults first emerge in late May and can be heard singing until mid-October. The most common collection dates are in July and August. Males may call from the same perch for several days (
Alexander and Moore 1962
). The song has been described as a continuous “zeekie, zeekie, zeekie” (
Davis 1918
,
1922
) and has a very orthopteran character.
Diceroprocta viridifascia
is primarily associated with coastal environs but can be found inland along sandy ridges within the Southern Coastal Plains and Southern Florida Coastal Plain ecoregions with a single specimen reported from the Southeastern Plains ecoregion (Fig. 12).
Van Duzee (1909)
collected specimens from tall “bunch grass” (no species given) on Estero Island.
Osborn (1921)
states that the species oviposits in stems of sea oats (
Uniola
sp.) in the tidal zone of the shoreline. The species has been reported to oviposit in sea oats (
Metcalf 1920
) and grasses (
Metcalf and Osborn 1920
) in North Carolina. We have also collected the species in oaks (
Quercus
spp.) and other small trees in coastal habitats and inland along sandy ridges. It has been collected in 32 counties in Florida: Alachua, Bay, Brevard, Broward, Citrus, Collier, Dade, Dixie, Duval, Escambia, Flagler, Franklin, Indian River, Jackson, Lee, Levy, Martin, Monroe, Nassau, Okaloosa, Orange, Palm Beach, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, Santa Rosa, Sarasota, St. John’s, St. Lucie, Volusia, Wakulla and Walton.