Flabellomicrosiphum Gillette & Palmer
This page updated: December 2024.
This is a genus of two species that live on sagebrush in the west (Artemisia). I have fond memories of F. tridentatae because it was one of the first native aphid species I collected and identified while a student in Hermiston, Oregon. It seems likely to me that the two species placed in this genus should be considered as Pleotrichophorus with very short siphunculi.
Flabellomicrosiphum knowltoni Smith
This is a beautiful aphid living on sagebrush, Artemisia tridentata, apparently preferring the type of sagebrush often known as Wyoming sagebrush (sometimes considered a variety, sometimes a subspecies). It is one of many aphid species that use this plant, and like most of them, it likes to run. I was lucky to get this photo.
So far I have samples from Oregon, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, Nevada, North Dakota, and Washington.
Flabellomicrosiphum tridentatae (Wilson)
As noted above, this is one of the first aphids I learned to collect when I was about 20 years old. It is locally common on big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata), but it is interestingly absent from large swaths of this plant’s range. Sagebrushes are known to be diverse in terms of plant chemistry, and it is possible that such variability in the plant controls the insect’s distribution. I so far have specimens from Idaho, Oregon, Washington, California, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, and Wyoming.