Aspidophorodon Verma, 1967
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1106.77912 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:27BB738A-103E-4081-BF66-44F645E207A4 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FED1D191-7309-5C9D-9B37-74598C94DDD1 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Aspidophorodon Verma, 1967 |
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Aspidophorodon Verma 1967: 507. Type species: Aspidophorodon harvense Verma 1967; by original designation. Miyazaki 1971: 183; Eastop and Hille Ris Lambers 1976: 95; Remaudière and Remaudière 1997: 73; Zhang et al. 1999: 349; Blackman and Eastop 2006: 1098; Stekolshchikov and Novgorodova 2010: 44; Nieto Nafría et al. 2011: 145; Chen et al. 2015: 557.
Indotuberoaphis Chakrabarti & Maity 1984: 198. Type species: Indotuberoaphis sorbi Chakrabarti & Maity 1984; by original designation.
Margituberculatus Zhang, Zhong & Zhang 1992: 381. Type species: Margituberculatus longituberculatum Zhang, Zhong & Zhang 1992; by original designation.
Raychaudhuriella Chakrabarti 1978: 355. Type species: Raychaudhuriella myzaphoides Chakrabarti 1978: 357; by original designation.
Generic diagnosis.
Head with three processes on frons; median frontal tubercle in apterae distinctly protuberant, hemispherical, rectangular, or forked, sometimes with a depression at the middle; antennal tubercles undeveloped, but each with a cylindrical, finger-shaped, or long horn-shaped process at inner apex, the process higher or lower than median frontal tubercle in apterae. Body dorsum with various markings in apterous viviparous females: wrinkles, irregular polygonal reticulations, oval or semicircular sculptures, or small papillate tubercles. Antennae 4- or 5-segmented (rarely 6-segmented) in apterae, 5- or 6-segmented in alatae. Ant. I usually rounded or projected to short cylindrical at inner apex. Secondary rhinaria present on antennal segments III-V in alatae. SIPH spoon-shaped, broad at base, thin at the middle, slightly swollen distally, obliquely truncated at tip, without flange. Cauda tongue-shaped or elongate conical, slightly constricted near the middle, sometimes with a constriction at base, with 4-5 setae, rarely 6-11.
Distribution.
Canada, China, India, Japan, Russia (Sakhalin, the Altai Republic, and the Kuril Islands), and Kashmir region.
Host plants.
Rosaceae ( Cotoneaster , Potentilla , Sorbus , Spiraea ), and Salicaceae ( Salix ), rarely on Polygonaceae ( Polygonum ).
Comments.
The genus Aspidophorodon includes two subgenera, the nominate subgenus and subgenus Aspidophorodon Eoessigia . The most important difference between the two subgenera is the presence of at least one spinal process on abdominal tergite VIII in Aspidophorodon (Eoessigia) , whereas no such spinal process is found on members of the nominate subgenus. See Chen et al. (2015) for a key to subgenera.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Aspidophorodon Verma, 1967
Xu, Ying, Jiang, Li-Yun, Chen, Jing, Kholmatov, Bakhtiyor Rustamovich & Qiao, Ge-Xia 2022 |
Margituberculatus
Zhang, Zhong & Zhang 1992 |
Indotuberoaphis sorbi
Chakrabarti, Samiran & Maity 1984 |
Raychaudhuriella
Chakrabarti 1978 |
Raychaudhuriella myzaphoides
Chakrabarti, Samiran 1978 |
Aspidophorodon
Verma 1967 |
Aspidophorodon harvense
Verma 1967 |