Fiorinia phantasma ( Cockerell & Robinson, 1915 )

Watson, Gillian W., Williams, Douglas J. & Miller, Douglass R., 2015, The identity and distribution of Fiorinia phantasma (Cockerell & Robinson) (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Diaspididae), with a new synonym, Zootaxa 4048 (2), pp. 291-300 : 295-298

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4048.2.9

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:441B7A90-2573-47DB-AED3-C1EDCEAF387D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6116572

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D02047-FFD7-FFB2-FF1D-C8682094FCC0

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Fiorinia phantasma ( Cockerell & Robinson, 1915 )
status

 

Fiorinia phantasma ( Cockerell & Robinson, 1915) View in CoL

( Figs 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 )

Fiorinia coronata Williams & Watson, 1988: 114 View in CoL , 116. Holotype adult female, Solomon Islands: Guadalcanal, on Cocos nucifera View in CoL , coll. E.S. Brown,?/06/1954 (BMNH). Syn. n.

Appearance in life is often quite distinctive, with some or all of the elongate second-instar females / exuviae containing pupillarial adult females having a median series of red-brown spots or transverse red-brown stripes on a yellow background ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 and Garcia 2011); however, sometimes there may be no striped individuals present in a colony. HDOA (2011), Anon. (2012) and Bethke (2012) mention a colour form that is entirely red, but this has not been present in the samples studied by GW.

Diagnosis (after Williams & Watson, 1988): Adult female on slide ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 A) about 0.65 mm long, broadly subrectangular, widest at about second abdominal segment, then narrowing abruptly to a triangular pygidium; body membranous except for lightly sclerotized pygidium; interantennal process ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 E) rounded, bearing short to long spicules, sometimes reduced in size and with only 1 or 2 spicules.

Pygidium ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 B) with notch at apex formed by parallel median lobes separated by about the width of 1 lobe; median lobes yoked by internal sclerosis, each lobe with pointed apex and 1 or 2 distal notches. Second lobes each bilobed, with inner lobule narrower than median lobe, with rounded apex approximately level with tip of median lobe; outer lobule smaller and shorter than inner lobule. Gland spines apparently absent. Long setae present between median and second lobes, and lateral to second lobes. Marginal ducts narrow, each about 6x as long as wide, numbering 4 on each side.

Ventral surface with perivulvar pores present in 5 elongate groups. Microducts present around submargins of pygidium, forward to about abdominal segment III; others present in median areas of free abdominal segments, and lateral to labium. Duct tubercles present in single, interrupted marginal row between mesothorax to abdominal segment II. Antennae set close together on margin of head, each bearing 1 long seta ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 E). Antennal spiracles each associated with 2 disc pores, each pore containing 3 loculi ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 C).

Second-instar exuviae moderately sclerotized, with a small median patch of thinner cuticle near the anterior margin located approximately over interantennal process of adult female. Pygidial margin with 5 marginal macroducts ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 D), each duct about 2x longer than wide.

An identification key to adult females of the better-documented species of Fiorinia in the Australasian, Nearctic and Neotropical Regions is provided. It has not been possible to include the following four species in the key, for the reasons discussed below:

(1) Fiorinia neocaledonica Lindinger, 1911 on Baeckia pinifoliae (Myrtaceae) in New Caledonia, a species with black second instar exuviae coated with white secretion ( Lindinger 1911). Mille et al. (in press) say that it is an endemic species found only in natural habitats in New Caledonia, but unfortunately do not comment on its morphology or appearance in life. No material of this species has been seen in this study.

(2) Fiorinia iavanica Leonardi, 1907 on Ilex sp. ( Aquifoliaceae ) in Indonesia (Java). According to MacGillivray (1921), median lobes rounded, without notches, divergent; second lobes rounded, not notched; perivulvar pores in 3 groups, numbering 33–35; and with 7–10 pores associated with each anterior spiracle. No material of this species has been seen in this study.

(3) Fiorinia geijeriae Froggatt, 1914 on Geijera salicifolia (Rutaceae) in Australia (New South Wales), a species with second-instar exuviae black except for a narrow brown margin. Examination of a slide-mounted syntype specimen and three adult females newly mounted from the original sample (BMNH), and non-type slidemounted specimens (USNM) indicate that this species is not a member of the genus Fiorinia . The median lobes are fused together and there is a pair of clavate, paraphysis-like internal sclerotizations on the pygidial margin. Examination of dry specimens from the original sample (BMNH) indicates that F. gei jeriae is not pupillarial, and the females form their scale covers beneath the epidermis of the leaf.

(4) Fiorinia drimydis (Maskell) was regarded as a nomen nudum by Deitz & Tocker (1979) and a nomen dubium by Henderson (2011), the only Maskell-collected material available to her being determined as immature specimens of Leucaspis sp.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Diaspididae

Genus

Fiorinia

Loc

Fiorinia phantasma ( Cockerell & Robinson, 1915 )

Watson, Gillian W., Williams, Douglas J. & Miller, Douglass R. 2015
2015
Loc

Fiorinia coronata

Williams 1988: 114
1988
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