Chilocorus pakistanensis (Ahmad & Ghani)

POORANI, J., 2023, An illustrated guide to the lady beetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) of the Indian Subcontinent. Part II. Tribe Chilocorini, Zootaxa 5378 (1), pp. 1-108 : 61

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5378.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:68976F75-EC46-480B-AB8A-061B1441A958

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11067923

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C44153-FF90-FF91-FF77-FF00FA9BFB78

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Chilocorus pakistanensis (Ahmad & Ghani)
status

 

Chilocorus pakistanensis (Ahmad & Ghani)

( Figs 44 View FIGURE 44 , 45 View FIGURE 45 )

Simmondsius pakistanensis Ahmad & Ghani, 1966: 9 .— Poorani 2002: 314; Kovář 2007: 595.

Chilocorus pakistanensis : Li et al. 2020b: 461.

Diagnosis. Length: 3.60–4.50 mm; width: 2.90–3.20 mm. Form ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 , 45a–c View FIGURE 45 ) elongate oval, dorsum moderately convex. Head ( Fig. 45b, c View FIGURE 45 ) blackish blue with greyish hairs; pronotum and elytra metallic greenish blue to blue, glabrous. Antenna ( Fig. 45d View FIGURE 45 ) short, with 7 antennomeres, antennomeres 4–7 forming a somewhat fusiform club. Maxilla ( Fig. 45e View FIGURE 45 ) dark brown to black, cylindrical, apical margin obliquely transverse. Tarsal claws sickle-shaped / falciform with weak basal teeth. Abdominal postcoxal lines ( Fig. 45f View FIGURE 45 ) incomplete. Male genitalia ( Figs. 45g –i View FIGURE 45 ) as illustrated. Coxites elongate triangular, spermatheca ( Fig. 45j View FIGURE 45 ) as illustrated.

Distribution. India (Uttarakhand; Jammu & Kashmir); Pakistan.

Prey / associated habitat. The type specimens were found “feeding on Parlatoria oleae (Colvee) on Pinus excelsa ” ( Ahmad & Ghani 1966) . Feeds on Aphis pomi and scale insects on apple ( Maqbool et al. 2020). Other known hosts include Aonidiella orientalis (Newstead) , Comstockaspis perniciosa , Leucaspis coniferarum Hall & Williams ( Diaspididae ).

Seasonal occurrence. In Kashmir, India, adults were observed to emerge in May and started overwintering in September ( Maqbool et al. 2020).

Natural enemies. Dinocampus coccinellae (Schrank) ( Hymenoptera : Braconidae ) ( Maqbool et al. 2018), Tetrastichus epilachnae Giard ( Hymenoptera : Eulophidae ).

Notes. This was the type species of Simmondsius Ahmad & Ghani (1966) , a genus described from Pakistan and now subsumed into Chilocorus . Simmondsius was erected based on the antenna with seven antennomeres and falciform tarsal claws and Li et al. (2020b) recently reduced it to a synonym of Chilocorus based on their combined molecular and morphological analysis of the tribe Chilocorini . It was not listed in the annotated checklist of Coccinellidae from Pakistan by Ali et al. (2018).

Orcus nepalicus Canepari 2012 , described from Nepal as the “most western species of the genus Orcus ”, is described as ‘dorsally black with blue metallic sheen’ and the ventral side is also largely blackish-brown.The description and the male genitalia illustrations given by Canepari (2012) indicate it is most likely to be a synonym of C. pakistanensis , a species distributed in the same geographical range. The type of O. nepalicus could not be studied for confirming this.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Coccinellidae

Genus

Chilocorus

Loc

Chilocorus pakistanensis (Ahmad & Ghani)

POORANI, J. 2023
2023
Loc

Chilocorus pakistanensis

Li, W. & Laczynski, P. & Escalona, E. & Eberl, J. & Huo, L. & Chen, X. & Huang, W. & Chen, B. & Ahrens, D. & Slipinski, A. & Tomaszewska, W. & Wang, X. 2020: 461
2020
Loc

Simmondsius pakistanensis

Kovar, I. 2007: 595
Poorani, J. 2002: 314
Ahmad, R. & Ghani, M. A. 1966: 9
1966
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