Megacanthaspis hangzhouensis Wei & Feng

Wei, Jiu-Feng & Feng, Ji-Nian, 2012, Two new species of Megacanthaspis Takagi (Hemiptera, Sternorrhyncha, Coccoidea, Diaspididae) from China, ZooKeys 210, pp. 1-8 : 4

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.210.3071

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E3DF60B2-57E0-F938-204B-B46A6C9FE779

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Megacanthaspis hangzhouensis Wei & Feng
status

sp. n.

Megacanthaspis hangzhouensis Wei & Feng   ZBK sp. n. Figures 1-6

Material examined.

Holotype: adult female: CHINA, Zhejiang Prov., Hangzhou City, Hangzhou botanical garden, 30°25'N, 120°12'E, 1.5.1982, Chou (NWAFU).

Paratypes: 7 adult females: same data as the holotype (NWAFU).

Description, n=8.

Adult female. Appearance in life not recorded. Slide-mounted adult female 552-617 μm long (holotype 598 μm long); 309-362 μm wide (holotype 337 μm wide), body outline oblong oval, with indistinct segmentation. Cephalothorax. Antennae each with a long seta and a tubercle. Anterior spiracles with 1-2 trilocular pores, pores absent from posterior spiracles. Pygidium marginal processes degenerate. Pygidial lobes absent, without paraphyses and plates. Marginal gland spines each 14-19 μm long, in 6 pairs on abdominal V-VIII, 1 pair on abdominal segments VII and VIII and 2 pairs on abdominal segments V and VI, each associated with 1 microduct; posteriormost median pair of gland spines widely separated. Gland tubercles absent. Dorsal macroducts forming obscure segmental rows and not obviously divided into marginal, submarginal and submedial groups, with about 17 on each side; without marginal dorsal macroducts at apex of pygidium between the posteriormost gland spines. Ventral microduct is smaller than dorsal macroduct, few, scattered on cephalothorqx and abdomen, with 4 or 5 near each anterior and posterior spiracles. Anal opening separated from apex of pygidium by a space about 82 μm long. Perivulvarpores present in an arc, divided in 5 groups, 4-7 median group, 5-8 anterolaterally, and 7-10 posterolaterally, 28-43 in total.

Diagnosis.

The new species is very close to Megacanthaspis phoebia (Tang, 1977) in having 6 pairs marginal gland spines. But differs in having (character-states on Megacanthaspis phoebia in brackets): (i) 2 pairs of gland spines on abdominal segments V and VI (only single on segments V & VI); (ii) marginal dorsal macroducts absent from apex of pygidium between median gland spines (present); (iii) gland tubercles absent (present).

Host.

Pleioblastus amarus ( Poaceae ).

Etymology.

Named after Hangzhou, the type locality.

Distribution.

China (Zhejiang).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Diaspididae

Genus

Megacanthaspis