Aphis (Aphis) parietariae Theobald, 1923
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.37828/em.2023.63.9 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13246990 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AE3F65-166F-FFE7-62CB-FC4C651298D4 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Aphis (Aphis) parietariae Theobald, 1923 |
status |
|
Aphis (Aphis) parietariae Theobald, 1923 View in CoL
( Figs 1–7 View Figures 1–7 )
Material: Hungary, Budapest, District I, Gellért hill, park pathway in rocky forest, Parietaria officinalis L., 140 m a.s.l., N 47.48930° E 19.04596°, leg. A. & D. Murányi, 26.xi.2017, oviparous apterous females, larvae, eggs GoogleMaps ; Hungary, Budapest, District XIX, Endresz György street, garden, Parietaria officinalis L., 120 m a.s.l., N 47.44512° E 19.15150°, leg. J. Kontschán, 1.vi.2018, viviparous apterous females, larvae GoogleMaps ; Hungary, Pest county, Visegrádi Mts, Pilisszentlászló , oak forest, Parietaria officinalis L., 335 m a.s.l., N 47.74961° E 18.99458°, leg. A. & D. Murányi, 24.ix.2022, viviparous apterous females, larvae, alate larva, mummies of apterae GoogleMaps ; Hungary, Fejér county, Vértes Mts, Csákvár, Haraszt-hegy , deciduous forest, Parietaria officinalis L., 225 m a.s.l., N 47.38918° E 18.43812°, leg. J. Kontschán, D. Murányi, 30.v.2018, viviparous apterous females GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis. Medium-sized, dark green Aphis with hints of light grey wax, dorsal abdomen without distinct dark markings, antennal tubercles undeveloped; siphunculi black, length 1.2–1.3 × cauda; cauda with 8–10 hairs; R IV+V 1.4–1.5 × HT II; antennal PT/BASE 4.2; antennal segment III with longest hairs 0.4–0.6 of its width.
Distribution and ecology. Widespread West Palaearctic species, in Central Europe it was known from Romania and Slovakia. Holocyclic and monoecious on Parietaria species, it presents dense colonies on stems, under the leaves and on inflorescences; ovipara and fundatrix unknown; presents apterous males. In Hungary, there was no aphid record from pellitory-of-the-wall. All other aphids known from pellitories are polyphagous ( Blackman & Eastop 2023). The Hungarian specimens of A. parietariae were collected from pellitory-of-the-wall growing in different habitats, ranging from natural forests to civil gardens (where it was a weed). The colonies were attended by ants, but mummies in the Pilisszentlászló population indicate Aphidiinae parasitoids. The colonies occupied stems and inflorescences, rarely leaves. No alates were found, but one alate larva in September. The Gellért hill population was collected in late November, and the pellitories were with many eggs attached to the stem and inflorescences, however, the apterous specimens collected are probably not true oviparae since tibiae are not swollen, and the abdomen is not extended. Dransfield & Brightwell (2023) reported apterae collected in January that as well seem to be vivipara instead of ovipara, suggesting anholocyclic development besides their usual holocycle.
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.