Horned treehopper

A horned treehopper sat on a leaf. It's a brown bug with two horns rising from the pronotum, which also extends back along the body in a wavy spine

Horned treehopper © Tom Hibbert

Horned treehopper

+ -
Enw gwyddonol: Centrotus cornutus
This bizarre bug can be found on plants in woodland rides and clearings.

Top facts

Stats

Length: 10mm

Conservation status

Widespread but local

Pryd i'w gweld

April to August

Ynghylch

The horned treehopper is one of just two treehoppers found in the UK. They're bugs, related to leafhoppers, frog hoppers and, more distantly, shieldbugs. Horned treehoppers are usually found on plants in woodland rides and clearings. They use their modified mouthparts (known as a rostrum) to suck up plant juices.

What to look for

A small, brown compact and very strange-looking bug. The pronotum (the section of the body behind the head) has two horn-like projections, and extends back over the body in a large, wavy spine.

Where to find

Widespread but patchily distributed in Wales and the southern half of England. Less common and even more patchily distributed in northern England.

Roeddech chi yn gwybod?

The UK's only other species of treehopper is Gargara genistae. It is scarcer than the horned treehopper, lacks the horns and is usually found around broom.