Novius sexnotatus (Mulsant)

Poorani, J., 2023, A review of the tribe Noviini (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) of the Indian subcontinent, Zootaxa 5311 (1), pp. 1-47 : 37-41

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5311.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0E28EEF2-38B4-412F-80C1-CC958A9B7B26

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8095450

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8A2A223E-EA4D-FF8C-02D6-717FB615FE3A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Novius sexnotatus (Mulsant)
status

 

Novius sexnotatus (Mulsant)

( Figs 28–30 View FIGURE 28 View FIGURE 29 View FIGURE 30 )

Epilachna sexnotata Mulsant, 1850: 807 .- Korschefsky 1931: 68 (as species incerta sedis).

Rodolia sexnotata: Booth & Pope 1989: 363 .

Novius sexnotatus: Pang et al. 2020: 20 View Cited Treatment .

Vedalia guerinii Crotch 1874: 282 .

Rodolia guerinii: Korschefsky, 1931: 101 .-Synonymised by Booth & Pope 1989: 363.

Rodolia immsi Weise, 1912: 120 .- Korschefsky 1931: 101; Kapur 1949: 535.

Diagnosis. Length: 4.80 mm; width: 3.80 mm. Form ( Fig. 28a–c View FIGURE 28 , 29a–c View FIGURE 29 ) broad oval to subovate, widest above middle of elytra, narrowed towards apex in posterior half, dorsum convex and densely pubescent. Ground colour bright carmine red or reddish brown. Pronotum with a pair of black spots on posterior margin, sometimes reduced or fused into a large transverse spot. Each elytron with three black spots, two below anterior margin, positioned above middle, sometimes fused to form a transverse macula, and one larger spot in the apical third. Abdominal postcoxal line complete, somewhat more deeply semicircular compared to other congeners ( Figs 28e View FIGURE 28 , 29d, e View FIGURE 29 ); posterior margin of abdominal ventrite 5 broadly emarginate and that of ventrite 6 apically weakly produced and broadly arcuate in female ( Fig. 29f View FIGURE 29 ), ventrite 6 medially deeply emarginate in male ( Fig. 29d View FIGURE 29 ). Male genitalia ( Figs 28f–h View FIGURE 28 , 29g –i View FIGURE 29 ) with penis guide of tegmen in inner view parallel-sided up to middle, narrowed thereafter, apical one–fifth more abruptly narrowed to a tubular apex ( Figs 28g View FIGURE 28 , 29h View FIGURE 29 ), apex obliquely arrow-head shaped in lateral view ( Figs 28f View FIGURE 28 , 29g View FIGURE 29 ); parameres distinctly longer than penis guide and apically narrowed, with short hairs on inner margin and apices; penis almost uniformly slender ( Figs 28h View FIGURE 28 , 29i View FIGURE 29 ), apically modified as illustrated ( Fig. 28i View FIGURE 28 ). Female genitalia ( Fig. 29j View FIGURE 29 ) as illustrated, spermatheca ( Fig. 29k View FIGURE 29 ) almost globular without well differentiated nodulus and ramus, sperm duct distinctly broader than in other congeners.

Immature stages. Larva fleshy, fusiform, dull red to dark reddish brown ( Fig. 30a–h View FIGURE 30 ). Pupa ( Fig. 30i View FIGURE 30 ) reddish brown.

Material examined. INDIA: Tamil Nadu: Veerachipatti, Karur Dist. , iii.2022, feeding on Icerya pilosa on sugarcane, R. Thanigairaj, 10 ex. ( NRCB) .

Distribution. India (Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Sikkim, Shivaliks); Pakistan; Bhutan; Nepal (Canepari 2003); Hong Kong (Rao & So 1967).

Prey/associated habitat. Icerya seychellarum (Westwood) , Icerya pilosa Green on sugarcane and wild grasses (label data). An important natural enemy of Drosicha stebbingii (Green) in sal ( Shorea robusta ) forests of north India ( Beeson 1941). All the specimens examined from South India (Tamil Nadu and Karnataka) were collected on sugarcane (label data).

Stebbing (1903, 1914) described the life stages and illustrated the adult with brief notes on its biology and his illustrations seem to match N. sexmaculatus more accurately than N. sexnotatus (see notes under N. sexmaculatus ). Beeson (1941) provided notes on its biology.

Venkatraman (1946) recorded it (as Rodolia guerini ) as a predator of all stages of the sugarcane scale, Icerya pilosa nardi Green (= Icerya pilosa Green ). He described the feeding behavior of the larvae as follows: “(…) the grubs rupture the dorsum of the nymphs with their large mandibles and feed on the body contents” and “in the case of older nymphs, as many as 3 to 4 grubs were found to attack a single specimen”.

Seasonal occurrence. Very active in April–May in north India. Collected during March–April (Tamil Nadu),

November (Karnataka).

Natural enemy. Venkatraman (1946) mentioned that ‘the grubs were heavily parasitized by Homalotylus flaminius (Dalman) ”, reducing their efficacy in controlling the sugarcane scale.

Notes. Novius sexnotatus was originally described from South India but appears to have a wide distribution in India and the specimens from South India are generally smaller than those from north and north-eastern India. The specimens from the north-eastern region appear to be slightly different but their genitalia could not be studied for confirmation.

Kapur (1949) erroneously synonymised N. sexmaculatus with N. guerini (see notes under N. sexmaculatus ). Variants of N. guerini with larger elytral maculae also resemble N. quadrimaculatus (Mader) var. 6-maculatus.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Coccinellidae

Genus

Novius

Loc

Novius sexnotatus (Mulsant)

Poorani, J. 2023
2023
Loc

Rodolia sexnotata:

Booth, R. G. & Pope, R. D. 1989: 363
1989
Loc

Rodolia guerinii:

Booth, R. G. & Pope, R. D. 1989: 363
Korschefsky, R. 1931: 101
1931
Loc

Rodolia immsi

Kapur, A. P. 1949: 535
Korschefsky, R. 1931: 101
Weise, J. 1912: 120
1912
Loc

Vedalia guerinii

Crotch, G. R. 1874: 282
1874
Loc

Epilachna sexnotata

Korschefsky, R. 1931: 68
Mulsant, E. 1850: 807
1850
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