Aleurodicus dispersus Russell
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https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.158856 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5659530 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FD3C627A-FFB6-FF96-FF40-FC9BFEC3F890 |
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Plazi |
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Aleurodicus dispersus Russell |
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Aleurodicus dispersus Russell View in CoL
( Figs 3, 63, 123)
Aleurodicus dispersus Russell, 1965: 49 View in CoL –54. Holotype, Florida [paratypes examined].
DISTRIBUTION. Neotropical Region — widely distributed; Nearctic Region — Florida; Palaearctic Region — Canary Islands, Madeira; Ethiopian Region — Cameroun, Congo, Benin, Ghana, Nigeria, Sao Tomé, Togo; Malagasian Region — Mauritius; Oriental Region — India, Maldives, Sri Lanka, Thailand; Austrooriental and Pacific Regions — widely distributed; Australia — northern Queensland.
COMMENTS. A. dispersus is one of only two known Aleurodicus species that possess only 4 pairs of abdominal compound pores, in total, on the puparium. A third member of the same small assemblage ( A. flavus Hempel ) has additionally just one pair of tiny compound pores, situated on abdominal segment VII, otherwise strongly resembling A. dispersus .
A. dispersus View in CoL was particularly unusual in remaining undescribed for many years, despite the accumulation of numerous samples in the USNM collection, most of them interceptions at United States port quarantine facilities; yet it is now the bestknown of all Aleurodicus View in CoL species. It is probable that A. dispersus View in CoL (the socalled “spiralling whitefly”) is native to the Caribbean and northern South America. Although many of the paratypes are from these native areas, Russell chose a sample from Florida from which to select the holotype. This curious technicality qualifies A.dispersus View in CoL as one of several neotropical whiteflies to have been described from material sampled in an area of probable introduction. This choice of holotype may have been the result of most other specimens, then available to Russell, being isolated quarantine interceptions with imprecise originating locality data. Since its description, the spiralling whitefly has become almost pantropical in its distribution, its rapid radiation having begun in the 1980s ( Martin & Lucas, 1984; Martin 1990).
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Aleurodicus dispersus Russell
John H. Martin 2004 |
Aleurodicus dispersus
Russell 1965: 49 |