Aslamidium semicirculare (Olivier)

Flowers, Wills & Chaboo, Caroline S., 2009, Novel host records of some cassidine leaf beetles from Ecuador (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Cassidinae), Insecta Mundi 2009 (95), pp. 1-8 : 5-6

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5167803

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C80E29-FFB0-FFEF-F8DA-E0E86016FDB8

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Aslamidium semicirculare (Olivier)
status

 

Aslamidium semicirculare (Olivier) View in CoL ( Figure 9–13 View Figure 7–13 )

Collecting data. Ecuador, Los Ríos Province, Estación Experimental Tropical Pichilingue, sector La Isla, ex Calathea lutea Schult. (Marantaceae) , 12–VI–2007, 15–VII2007; sector Santa Rita, ex Calathea lutea , 19–VII–2008, 23–VII–2008, 15–VIII–2008, R.W. Flowers, R. Troya, J. Cedeño.

Host plants. Calathea lutea is a very large plant at maturity, with leaves measuring three to four meters high ( Fig. 9 View Figure 7–13 ). It is locally called “bijao” and is used by people in the countryside of western Ecuador for thatching roofs ( Fig. 11 View Figure 7–13 ) and for wrapping food eaten in the field (J. Cabanilla, pers. com.).

This cassidine species was found feeding only on the younger leaves less than a half meter in height. Adults were found on the upper side of leaves growing at heights of 44mm to 160mm. Feeding scars measured 1.5mm wide and from 1.5mm to 28mm long. No Aslamidium individuals or their diagnostic feeding scars were found on the older leaves of the mature plant, which are noticeably thicker than the earlier leaves and are covered with a thick waxy secretion on the undersides. No eggs or larvae were observed, and the number of beetles decreased between the first and last observations, corresponding to the drying out of the habitat.

Aslamidium semicirculare was also found on another species of Calathea , C. majestica (Linden) H. Kenn. ( Fig. 10, 13 View Figure 7–13 ), which was growing in dense shade in a stand of mature second-growth forest at Pichilingue. Leaf scarring and observed behavior of the beetles was similar to those on C. lutea . These are the first host records for this cassidine.

Seasonality. Adults were present throughout the dry season. Numbers on leaves at Pichilingue decreased between July and August, but had somewhat increased again between August and late October 2008. No larvae have been found on either host plant.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Chrysomelidae

Genus

Aslamidium

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Liliopsida

Order

Zingiberales

Family

Marantaceae

Genus

Calathea

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF