Oenopia sexareata (Mulsant)

POORANI, J., 2023, An illustrated guide to lady beetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) of the Indian Subcontinent. Part 1. Tribe Coccinellini, Zootaxa 5332 (1), pp. 1-307 : 221-224

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5332.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:424F7439-4095-46A5-93E3-C4130E3B6D9A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8261694

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C74162-1484-46E8-BDDF-3347FC5CFD82

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Oenopia sexareata (Mulsant)
status

 

Oenopia sexareata (Mulsant)

( Figs 158 View FIGURE 158 , 159 View FIGURE 159 )

Coelophora sexareata Mulsant, 1853: 53 (Lectotype, UCCC; Type locality: India).

Coelophora sexareata: Korschefsky 1932: 296 ; Kapur 1963a: 29.

Coelophora sexareata var. lacerata Sicard, 1913: 510 .— Korschefsky 1932: 296.

Gyrocaria sexareata: Miyatake 1967: 76 .

Oenopia sexareata: Hoang 1983: 62 ; Poorani 2002a: 337; Poorani 2002b: 101; Yu 2010: 95.

Diagnosis. Length: 3.85–4.32 mm; width: 3.25–3.80 mm. Form ( Figs 158f View FIGURE 158 , 159a–c View FIGURE 159 ) broad oval to almost circular, dorsum strongly convex and glabrous. Head anteriorly creamy white to yellow in males, completely black in females. Pronotum black, except anterior corners light yellow. Elytra bright carmine red, orange or yellowish in live specimens ( Fig. 159a–c View FIGURE 159 ), yellowish brown in older specimens, with a characteristic areolate pattern having six cells, sometimes cell boundaries somewhat broken and not continuous. Male genitalia ( Fig. 158g –i View FIGURE 158 ) and spermatheca ( Fig. 158j View FIGURE 158 ) as illustrated.

Immature stages. As illustrated in Fig. 158a–e View FIGURE 158 .

Distribution. India (Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Himachal Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Punjab, Sikkim, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal); Nepal; Bhutan; Myanmar; China; Vietnam.

Prey/associated habitat. Hemiptera: Aphidoidea : Adelges sp. , Brachycaudus helichrysi (Kaltenbach) , Brevicoryne brassicae (Linnaeus) , Eutrichosiphum raychaudhurii (Ghosh) , Indoidiopterus geranii Chowdhuri et al. , Macrosiphum rosae (Linnaeus) , Mollitrichosiphum alni Ghosh et al. , Myzus persicae (Sulzer) , Pemphigus ? napaeus Buckton, Pineus sp. , Rhopalosiphum maidis (Fitch) , Shinjia orientalis (Mordvilko) (as S. pterydifoliae (Shinji)) , Sitobion miscanthi (Takahashi) , Sitobion rosaeiformis (Das) , Taoia indica (Ghosh & Raychaudhuri) . Collected on cabbage and other cole crops, potato, silver fir, pine, potato, Artemisia vulgaris , Alnus nepalensis , etc.

Seasonal occurrence. Very common during summer (March–July) in northern and northeastern India. Collected during February, October–December (label data).

Notes. It is one of the most pretty and commonly collected species of Oenopia in the northeastern region of India. Devi (1989) listed its prey and associated host plants. For more detailed accounts and illustrations, see Miyatake (1967), Poorani (2002b), Ren et al. (2009) and Yu (2010).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Coccinellidae

Genus

Oenopia

Loc

Oenopia sexareata (Mulsant)

POORANI, J. 2023
2023
Loc

Oenopia sexareata:

Yu, G. 2010: 95
Poorani, J. 2002: 337
Poorani, J. 2002: 101
2002
Loc

Gyrocaria sexareata:

Miyatake, M. 1967: 76
1967
Loc

Coelophora sexareata:

Kapur, A. P. 1963: 29
Korschefsky, R. 1932: 296
1932
Loc

Coelophora sexareata var. lacerata

Korschefsky, R. 1932: 296
Sicard, A. 1913: 510
1913
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