Oenopia sauzeti Mulsant
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5332.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:424F7439-4095-46A5-93E3-C4130E3B6D9A |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8273854 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C74162-1482-46EB-BDDF-36EBFBD2FB72 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Oenopia sauzeti Mulsant |
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( Figs 155–157 View FIGURE 155 View FIGURE 156 View FIGURE 157 )
Oenopia sauzeti Mulsant, 1866: 281 (Lectotype, UCCC; Type locality: “les Indes orientales”).
Oenopia sauzeti: Crotch 1874: 158 ; Kapur 1963: 27; Gordon 1987: 19; Yu 2010: 100–101; Poorani 2002a: 337; Poorani 2002b: 103; Poorani et al. 2015: 237.
Gyrocaria sauzeti: Miyatake 1967: 76 ; 1985: 15.
Diagnosis. Length: 3.40–4.60 mm; width: 2.76–3.60 mm. Form ( Figs 155a, b View FIGURE 155 , 156f View FIGURE 156 ) short oval, dorsum convex and glabrous. Head black in female, yellow in male. Ground colour of pronotum and elytra creamy yellow to bright lemon yellow with black markings. Pronotum with a hat–shaped black marking ( Fig. 155c View FIGURE 155 ) on posterior margin, its posterolateral ends never reaching posterolateral corners of pronotum. Elytral pattern ( Fig. 155a, b View FIGURE 155 ) as illustrated, median sutural spot broad, distinctly transverse-quadrate and rectangular, rarely with rounded edges. Antenna with antennomeres 9 and 10 distinctly transverse, antennal club short and compact ( Fig. 155e View FIGURE 155 ). Elytral punctures distinct, interspaces between elytral punctures more or less smooth ( Fig. 155d View FIGURE 155 ) to alutaceous, without any microsculpture. Male genitalia ( Fig. 155f, g View FIGURE 155 ) and spermatheca ( Fig. 155h View FIGURE 155 ) as illustrated.
Immature stages. Eggs yellow and spindle shaped ( Fig. 157a View FIGURE 157 ). Larva slaty grey to black with yellow maculation ( Fig. 157b–d View FIGURE 157 ). Pupa black with yellow spots ( Fig. 157e View FIGURE 157 ).
Distribution. Widely distributed in north and northeastern regions of India (Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Manipur, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Mizoram, Punjab, Sikkim, Tripura, West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand); Eastern Himalayas; Bhutan; Pakistan; Nepal; Myanmar; Thailand; China; Laos; Vietnam; Taiwan.
More widely distributed than its closest relative, O. mimica . It is very common in all the northeastern states of India and in the northern region, it appears to be more prevalent in higher elevations and cooler climes and rarely found in the plains ( Poorani et al. 2015). It was introduced in North America for controlling balsam woolly aphid [ Adelges piceae (Ratzeburg) ], but did not establish (Amman & Speers 1964; Mitchell & Wright 1967).
Prey/associated habitat. It is mainly aphidophagous and also feeds on whiteflies. Aleyrodidae : Aleurolobus barodensis (Maskell) and Neomaskellia andropogonis Corbett. Aphidoidea : Adelges sp. , Aphis gossypii Glover , Aphis fabae Scopoli , Aphis kurosawai Takahashi , Aphis longisetosa Basu , Aphis spiraecola Patch , Brachycaudus helichrysi (Kaltenbach) , Brevicoryne brassicae (Linnaeus) , Capitophorus hippophaeus javanicus Hille Ris Lambers , Capitophorus formosartemisiae (Takahashi) , Cavariella aegopodii (Scopoli) , Clethrobius dryobius Chakrabarti & Raychaudhuri , Coloradoa artemisicola Takahashi , Eriosoma lanigerum (Hausmann) , Hyadaphis coriandri (Das) , Liosomaphis atra Hille Ris Lambers , Macrosiphoniella pseudoartemisiae Shinji , Macrosiphoniella sanborni (Gillette) , Macrosiphoniella sp. , Macrosiphum rosae (Linnaeus) , Melanaphis donacis (Passerini) , Myzus obtusirostris David et al. , Myzus persicae (Sulzer) , Phorodon cannabis Passerini , Rhopalosiphum padi (Linnaeus) , Sipha maydis Passerini , Schizaphis graminum (Rondani) , Sitobion avenae (Fabricius) , Sitobion rosaeiformis (Das) , Aphis (Toxoptera) aurantii Boyer de Fonscolombe ; Psyllidae : Arytaina sp. and Psylla sp. ; Cicadellidae : Evacanthus repexus Distant (Cicadellidae) . Acari: Tetranychus sp.
Collected on spruce, pine, maize, potato, Artemisia sp. , chrysanthemum, milk weed, silver fir, etc. (label data). Agarwala and Ghosh (1988) include O. mimica as a synonym of O. sauzeti in their list of host records for the latter, some of which might be erroneous.
Seasonal occurrence. Collected during January–February, March–July, and November–December from northwestern and eastern regions of India. Active during April–October in Pakistan, abundant during May–August ( Hayat et al. 2017).
Notes. Stebbing (1903) studied its life history and described and illustrated the larva and adult. Miyatake (1985), Poorani (2002) and Poorani et al. (2015) described it in detail with illustrations to separate it from O. mimica . Ghosh et al. (1986) studied its biology. Also treated by Ren et al. (2009) and Yu (2010).
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.
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Oenopia sauzeti Mulsant
POORANI, J. 2023 |
Oenopia sauzeti:
Poorani, J. & Jalali, S. K. & Ojha, R. 2015: 237 |
Yu, G. 2010: 100 |
Poorani, J. 2002: 337 |
Poorani, J. 2002: 103 |
Gordon, R. D. 1987: 19 |
Gyrocaria sauzeti:
Miyatake, M. 1985: 15 |
Miyatake, M. 1967: 76 |
Oenopia sauzeti
Mulsant, E. 1866: 281 |