Peliococcus

Kaydan, Mehmet Bora, 2015, A systematic study of Peliococcus Borchsenius (Hemiptera: Coccoidea: Pseudococcidae), with descriptions of a new Palaearctic genus and four new species from Turkey, Zootaxa 3920 (2), pp. 201-248 : 214

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3920.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:57A4B8A3-C5A5-45FB-96E6-B26123271F66

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6102185

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D2879A-B36D-FFCE-DFDE-FF799BFDFAB9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Peliococcus
status

 

Key to species of Peliococcus View in CoL View at ENA in the Palaearctric region, based on morphology of adult females

1. Circulus absent....................................................................................... 2

- Circulus present....................................................................................... 6

2. Dorsal oral collar tubular ducts of 2 sizes present............................................... P. courzius Goux View in CoL

- Dorsal oral collar tubular ducts of only 1 size present......................................................... 3

3. Multilocular disc pores abundant throughout dorsum........................... P. m a r ti n e z i Gavrilov & Matile-Ferrero

- Multilocular disc pores either absent on dorsum or very few or only sparsely present on posterior abdominal segments..... 4

4. Dorsal conical setae larger than cerarian setae................................... Peliococcus mathisi (Balachowsky)

- Dorsal conical setae similar in size to cerarian setae.......................................................... 5

5. Antennae 8 segmented................................................................. P. spinigerus (Goux)

- Antennae 9 segmented............................................................. P. marrubii (Kiritchenko)

6. Dorsal oral collar tubular ducts of 2 sizes present............................................................ 7

- Dorsal oral collar tubular ducts of only 1 size present......................................................... 8

7. Quinquelocular pores abundant throughout venter..................................... P. chersonensis (Kiritchenko) View in CoL

- Quinquelocular pores absent on venter or only a few present around mouthparts............... P. turanicus (Kiritchenko) View in CoL

8. Multilocular disc pores either absent on dorsum or with very few (1–4) on posterior abdominal segments only........... 9

- Multilocular disc pores present throughout dorsum.......................................................... 11

9. Dorsal oral collar tubular ducts on abdominal segments few, rarely in a row; dorsal oral collar tubular ducts wide, more than twice that of ventral ducts............................................................. P. latitubulatus Danzig View in CoL

- Dorsal oral collar tubular ducts on abdominal segments either in a single row or in dense double rows; dorsal oral collar tubular ducts narrow, subequal to or only slightly wider than that of ventral ducts........................................ 10

10. C1-C17 each with 2 or 3 trilocular pores.................................................. P. multispinus (Siraiwa) View in CoL

- C1-C17 each with only 1 trilocular pore...................................................... P. loculatus Danzig View in CoL

11. Quinquelocular pores absent on venter or with only a few present around mouthparts.............................. 12

- Quinquelocular pores abundant throughout venter........................................................... 13

12. Marginal cerarii numbering 11 pairs..................................................... P. vivarensis Tranfaglia View in CoL

- Marginal cerarii numbering 17 pairs........................................................... P. ocanae Goux View in CoL

13. Dorsal clusters present in abdominal segments VIII+IX...................................................... 14

- Dorsal clusters absent from abdominal segments VIII+IX..................................................... 16

14. Clusters with multilocular disc pores arranged in distinct transverse rows of about 10+ clusters on dorsum of thorax; dorsal multilocular disc pores on posterior abdominal segments in compact bands........................... P. rosae Danzig View in CoL

- Clusters with multilocular disc pores few (<10) on dorsum of thorax and not in distinct transverse rows; dorsal multilocular disc pores present on posterior abdominal segments in separate clusters.......................................... 15

15. Antennae 7 or 8 segmented............................................................ P. calluneti (Lindinger)

- Antennae 9 segmented.......................................................... P. agriensis Kaydan , sp. nov.

16. Each cluster on dorsal abdominal segments well defined, with more than 6 multilocular disc pores.... P. globulariae (Goux) View in CoL

- Each cluster on dorsal abdominal segments not well defined, with fewer than 5 multilocular disc pores................. 17

17. With more than 18 pairs of marginal cerarii; ventral multilocular disc pores abundant throughout; dorsal cerarii in a longitudi- nal row on mid-dorsum of all segments............................................... P. morrisoni (Kiritchenko) View in CoL

- With fewer than 15 pairs of marginal cerarii; ventral multilocular disc pores restricted to a few on thorax and head; one dorsal cerarius restricted to abdominal segment VII and one on each thoracic segment.................... P. phyllobius (Goux) View in CoL

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Pseudococcidae

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF