Paralecanium machili Takahashi, 1933

Joshi, Sunil, Gupta, Ankita, Shashank, P. R., Pai, Sachin G., Mohan, M., Rachana, R. R., Dubey, Vinod Kumar, Sandeep, Angalakuditi & Deepthy, K. B., 2022, Recent adventive soft scale insects (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) and mealybugs (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Pseudococcidae) in India, Zootaxa 5194 (2), pp. 213-232 : 221-222

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5194.2.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DA49F564-620C-46E1-839A-D4A3B0136B3B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7147432

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/432D5F6B-FFBB-FFA5-6BAC-FF562AD0FD6B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Paralecanium machili Takahashi
status

 

Paralecanium machili Takahashi View in CoL

Paralecanium machili Takahashi 1933: 37 View in CoL . Hodgson & Williams 2018: 105–107 View Cited Treatment .

Podoparalecanium machili Tao, Wong & Chang 1983: 100 View in CoL .

Material examined: INDIA, Karnataka, Kemmangundi, N 13.5500°, E 75.7500°, on Cinnamomum tamala (Buch.- Ham.) T. Nees & C.H. Eberm. ( Lauraceae ), 4.ii.2021, Sunil Joshi coll., 30 ♀♀.

Appearance in life ( Fig. 1c View FIGURE 1 ): Often found adjacent to major leaf veins. Adult female very dark brown or glossy black, lighter on margin and submarginal areas and stigmatic clefts, colour becoming intense in median area anterior to anal plates; anal plates light reddish. Body subcircular or asymmetrical and slightly deltoid, almost flat but slightly convex in the median area; dorsum covered with numerous minute pits and divided into irregular tessellations by narrow smooth bands, of which a single median band runs from anal plates towards head and 6 or 7 curved horizontal bands ramify from medial band to margin. Nymphs transparent yellow.

Diagnosis of slide-mounted adult female (n=30): Body almost triangular, broadest posteriorly across abdomen ( Fig. 4q View FIGURE 4 ), narrower anteriorly, asymmetrical and rounded at both ends. Marginal setae each fan shaped ( Fig. 4a View FIGURE 4 ), wider than long. Stigmatic clefts deep, each with a sclerotized inner margin and containing 3 stigmatic setae ( Fig. 4b View FIGURE 4 ). Eyespots oval ( Fig. 4c View FIGURE 4 ), situated near margin.

Dorsum: Derm with small areolations near margin, becoming larger in a broad submarginal band ( Fig. 4d View FIGURE 4 ), these becoming darker and unclear medially. Clear areas present only on abdomen ( Fig. 4e View FIGURE 4 ), absent from head and thoracic segments. Setae each 4–5 µm long, curved with a blunt apex ( Fig. 4f View FIGURE 4 ), sparse, more numerous near margin, perhaps absent medially (not visible due to high degree of sclerotization). Pores of three types: large pores with a sclerotized margin ( Fig. 4g View FIGURE 4 ), common on submargin; smaller pores, lacking a sclerotized margin, appearing as a smaller clear spot in sclerotized derm ( Fig. 4h View FIGURE 4 ), arranged in a polygonal pattern; and minute simple pores, each with an inner ductule, also forming a sparse polygonal pattern. Anal plates each with a rounded outer angle ( Fig. 4i View FIGURE 4 ), 1 or 2 small pores medially and 2–4 small setae near apex.

Venter: Anogenital fold with 1 small seta on each side on anterior margin ( Fig. 4j View FIGURE 4 ), each lateral margin with 1 seta at anterior end, and 2 setae laterally ( Fig. 4k View FIGURE 4 ). Anal ring with 6–8 setae ( Fig. 4p View FIGURE 4 ). Multilocular pores present on either side of genital opening ( Fig. 4l View FIGURE 4 ), also on 1 or 2 abdominal segments. Spiracular disc pores ( Fig. 4m View FIGURE 4 ) forming a narrow band of 10–12 pores between each spiracle and margin on short side; longer side of body with 18–20 pores present in each band. Legs fairly well developed, each with tibio-tarsal segmentation. Tarsal digitules slightly longer than claw digitules, with capitate apices, equal in size; claw digitules both broad and about same width; claw without a denticle ( Fig. 4n View FIGURE 4 ). Antennae each with 6 segments ( Fig. 4o View FIGURE 4 ).

Comparison: Hodgson and Williams (2018) provided an excellent taxonomic illustration and detailed description of this species in their revision of the soft scale genus Paralecanium ; only one species of Paralecanium , P. maritimum (Green) was known from India before their study. Paralecanium maritimum possesses large dorsal pores, each 5–7 µm wide, whereas such large dorsal pores are absent in P. machili , which has smaller pores each only 4–5 µm wide. Paralecanium machili has marginal ornamentation in the form of strong sclerotized “dashes” at right-angles to margin, which is not present in P. maritimum .

Ecological notes: Paralecanium machili was collected in large numbers on Indian bay leaf ( Cinnamomum tamala ), with at least one scale insect per leaf. The scale may restrict itself to higher altitudes on host plants belonging to Lauraceae , the only family on which it has been recorded so far ( García Morales et al. 2016).

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Coccidae

Genus

Paralecanium

Loc

Paralecanium machili Takahashi

Joshi, Sunil, Gupta, Ankita, Shashank, P. R., Pai, Sachin G., Mohan, M., Rachana, R. R., Dubey, Vinod Kumar, Sandeep, Angalakuditi & Deepthy, K. B. 2022
2022
Loc

Podoparalecanium machili

Tao, C. C. C. & Wong, C. Y. & Chang, Y. C. 1983: 100
1983
Loc

Paralecanium machili

Hodgson, C. J. & Williams, D. J. 2018: 105
Takahashi, R. 1933: 37
1933
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