Ceraleurodicus wire Canty, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5277.2.4 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:43B62ECB-A644-40BB-8CF0-DA69E44E7EA6 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7889833 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3D39810B-FFC6-9C05-7ADF-9D11FCFAAA24 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Ceraleurodicus wire Canty |
status |
sp. nov. |
Ceraleurodicus wire Canty sp. nov.
Distribution. Neotropical region— Ecuador.
Host. Arecaceae : Cocos nucifera , “oil palm” Elaeis sp.
Material examined. Holotype: 1 puparium, split into dorsal and ventral sides, on 1 slide, marked as HT, ECUADOR, Coca city, on “oil palm”, vii.1984 (G. Onore #40) ( NHMUK010162411 About NHMUK ) ( NHMUK) . Paratypes: 5 puparia, marked as PT, on 2 slides ECUADOR, Coca city (Orellana Province), in military base, on Cocos nucifera L., 16.ii.2005 (J. H. Martin #8144) ( NHMUK010162409 About NHMUK [3 specimens]; NHMUK010162410 About NHMUK [2 specimens]) ( NHMUK) .
Description
Puparium: Body ( Figs 11a View FIGURE 11 , 12a View FIGURE 12 ) Elongate-oval and symmetrical in shape (3.44–4.08 mm long, 2.08–2.44 mm wide, generally widest at abdominal segment IV). Dorsum with 9 pairs of lateral rays on the dorsum, running mesad from the puparial margin.
On the sub-mesial plane of the dorsum are 5 pairs of compound pores. The first 4 pairs are subequal in size (diameter 22–26 µm), each with a small, rod-like central process, which does not extend past the margin of the pore ( Figs 11d View FIGURE 11 , 12c View FIGURE 12 ). Each pore is located at the edge of the mesial plane thusly: the first pair is located on the cephalothoracic region and the last 3 pairs are found on abdominal segments III (on or near the boundary between abdominal segments II and III), IV (in the middle of the segment) and V (on or near the boundary between segments V and VI). The 5th pair of compound pores ( Fig. 11c View FIGURE 11 ) are reduced in size (diameter 11–15 µm), and are located on abdominal segment VII posterior to the VO, on the posterior margin of the 9th pair of rays. On the same latitude as, and between the cephalothoracic compound pores, are a pair of granular-looking areas made up of miniscule, agglomerate pores ( Fig. 11e View FIGURE 11 ). The dorsum is also covered, relatively densely, with miniscule dorsal disc pores, made prominent by the small, wire-like bristles extruding from them.
The margin is planar, but with submarginal folds producing a crenulated submarginal layer with well-defined teeth, and an additional layer of folds of less well-defined teeth, appearing as collars for the dentate folds ( Figs 11b View FIGURE 11 , 12b View FIGURE 12 ). The submargins of rays 2 and 9 (counting from the anterior to the posterior), however, have combs of 6 teeth that are finer than the teeth along the rest of the margin, with the middle 4 teeth being finer than the 2 outer teeth ( Figs 11b View FIGURE 11 , 12b View FIGURE 12 ).
VO ( Figs 11f View FIGURE 11 , 12d View FIGURE 12 ) is rounded, subcordate (0.13–0.15 mm long; about 1.2 times longer than wide). Inset from caudal margin by approximately 7–8 times its own length. Operculum widely oblong and smooth, approximately 1.6 times wider than long, and covering approximately half of the lingula. Lingula inserted and subdeltoid in shape.
Adults. Unknown—no adults that could be linked to these specimens were available for study.
Etymology. The species epithet wire , a noun in apposition, is the name of a seminal art-rock group, Wire, whose members have shown an interest in nature and natural history in their work.
Comments. The specimens examined were identified only to genus level, as Ceraleurodicus , by Dr. Jon Martin. Superficially, C. wire sp. n. potentially resembles C. neivai ; however, it displays a unique set of characters. Compared to C. neivai , the body shape of C. wire is similar, but more elongate than C. neivai ; C. wire has 9 pairs of rays, as opposed to the 8 pairs on C. neivai , and only rays 2 and 9 of C. wire end in combs, as opposed to rays 1, 2, 4, and 8 in C. neivai ; there are only 5 pairs of compound pores (4 large and 1 small in C. wire as opposed to 6 pairs (5 large and 1 miniscule) in C. neivai , the pores in C. wire being much reduced in size and closer to the mesial plane compared to the pores of C. neivai . In C. wire , the operculum is widely oblong and the lingula is subcordate, whereas in C. neivai the operculum is cordiform and the lingula is spatulate. Finally, the pair of granular areas of the minute, agglomerate pores on the cephalothoracic region, and the minuscule dorsal pores with the minute, wire-like bristles protruding from them, are unique features to C. wire .
NHMUK |
Natural History Museum, London |
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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