Taedia scrupea

(Say, 1832)

Taedia scrupea is a of in the , first described by Thomas Say in 1832. It is a (: ) with a broad distribution across eastern and central North America, extending into Mexico. The species has been documented in 887 iNaturalist observations, indicating it is moderately well-recorded in citizen science datasets.

Taedia scrupea by (c) River Ahlquist, some rights reserved (CC BY), uploaded by River Ahlquist. Used under a CC-BY license.Miridae, Taedia scrupea (or related), Plant Bug - ID thanks to Robert Velten of FB's BG group (47995014312) by Andy Reago & Chrissy McClarren. Used under a CC BY 2.0 license.

Pronunciation

How to pronounce Taedia scrupea: /ˈtae̯.di.a ˈskruː.pe.a/

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Distribution

Eastern and central United States (Georgia, Illinois, Maryland, Virginia, New York, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Jersey, Ohio, Iowa, Texas, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Vermont), southern Canada (Ontario), and Mexico. Records span Middle America and North America broadly.

More Details

Original Description

Originally described as Capsus scrupeus by Thomas Say in 1832, later transferred to Taedia.

Taxonomic Status

Accepted in Catalogue of Life and GBIF; basionym Capsus scrupeus noted in NCBI .

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Sources and further reading