[1][2] The Rovno amber inclusion was recovered from amber mining operations in the Klesov area working Late Eocene sediments[1] of the Mezhigorje Formation and underlying Obukhov Formation which cover granite basement rock of the area.
The other specimen was first illustrated in 1856 as a third instar nymph of "Pseudophana reticulata", a species now placed in the genus Protepiptera.
[1] The Rovno amber specimen was first studied by Russian entomologists Alexander Emeljanov and Dmitry Shcherbakov, with their 2016 type description for the genus and species being published in the journal ZooKeys.
[1] The pronotum is modified in outline, with 2/3 of its middle length placed between the eyes and the front edge is nearly straight.
The front edges are raised ridges and run parallel to the rear inside margin of the pronotum.
Each of the wax pores is surrounded by ridges, and the smaller upper plate of tergite 7 is divided in half by a chitinous bridge.