Aleurocanthus arecae, David, B. Vasantharaj & Manjunatha, And M., 2003
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.156271 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6276702 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038EE903-FF83-0A2C-7501-F9A6FC72726B |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Aleurocanthus arecae |
status |
sp. nov. |
Aleurocanthus arecae View in CoL sp. nov.
(Fig. 1)
Puparium. Blackish brown with powdery wax sparsely distributed on cases; found in groups on the undersurface of leaves. Oval in shape; female puparia measure 1.17 – 1.31 mm long, 0.85 – 1.04 mm wide. Male puparia smaller than female, 1.07 – 1.14 mm long, 0.63 – 0.84 mm wide, with reduced spination. Margin lobulate, 45 teeth occupying 0.1 mm. Anterior and posterior marginal setae present, minute. Thoracic and caudal pore regions not differentiated.
1. Aleurocanthus arecae View in CoL sp. nov.
Dorsum. Dorsal spines pointed; 14 cephalothoracic pairs of which 5 submarginal, 140 240 µm long, 9 subdorsal/submedian, 60290 µm long, and 18 abdominal pairs of which 8 submarginal, 140240 µm long, 6 subdorsal, 60250 µm long, 4 submedian 18250 µm long.
Chaetotaxy. Cephalic, eighth abdominal and caudal setae present, caudal setae being the longest, 180240 µm long. Submargin with short capitate setae interspersed in between the bases of submarginal spines.
Vasiform orifice hardly elevated, subcircular; operculum filling orifice obscuring lingula. Floor of vasiform orifice with irregular teeth. Caudal furrow absent.
Ven te r. Antenna reaching base of prothoracic leg. Spines absent at base of legs. Thoracic and caudal tracheal folds not discernible. Ventral abdominal setae anterior to vasiform orifice, minute. Submarginal area with a row of mushroomshaped glandular structures.
Etymology. Named after the host Areca catechu .
Host Plant: Areca catechu (Palmae)
Holotype: One pupal case on slide, Vidiga, Shimoga district, Karnataka, Areca catechu , 11. 11. 2000, M. Manjunatha. Deposited in the collections of the Division of Entomology, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi.
Paratypes: Nine pupal cases mounted bearing holotype data. One with Dr. M. Manjunatha; one with Prof. R. W. Alexander Jesudasan, Department of Zoology, Madras Christian College, Tambaram East, Chennai 600 059; remaining with Dr. B. V. David. 39 pupal cases, Areca catechu , Karnataka, Vittal, 19.i.2000, ENQ 2002/1087, H004, Natural History Museum, London and BVD collection.
Comments. A. arecae belongs to a small group of Aleurocanthus species which possess very coarse marginal teeth in the puparial stage, only 45 teeth per 0.1mm. The bestknown of this group is A. woglumi Ashby , a common and widespread pest of citrus and some other cultivated woody plants. A. arecae differs from woglumi in having the second and third posteriormost pairs of submarginal abdominal spines doubled (only the third posteriormost pair is so doubled in woglumi ). The submarginal spines are also more even in length in arecae , generally shorter than in woglumi . This new species also resembles Aleurocanthus clitoriae Jesudasan & David , in having the second and third posterior most pairs of abdominal submarginal spines doubled, but clitoriae is not a member of the woglumi group, possessing much finer marginal teeth.
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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