Aleurotulus laneus, Martin, 2005
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1098.1.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5054362 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D4B00F-FFD8-C53B-FECA-9E59FB0E5094 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Aleurotulus laneus |
status |
sp. nov. |
Aleurotulus laneus View in CoL sp. nov.
( Figs 9–12 View FIGURES 9–12 , 101)
PUPARIUM. Habitus. Puparia developing in small aggregations under leaf blades. Each individual secreting dense tangle of fine, translucent, filaments from dorsal surface, and marginal fringe of moreopaque wax rays. Margin. Outline ovoid, 0.90–1.05 mm long, 0.54–0.65 mm wide, generally widest at abdominal segment II/III (n=10). Margin regularly crenulate, 10–11 teeth occupying 0.1 mm, teeth not modified at thoracic tracheal openings. Dorsum. In outer submargin, each marginal tooth with a distinct basal gland, narrower than tooth ( Fig. 10–11 View FIGURES 9–12 ), ovoid and slightly longer than wide; a pair of subtle folds extending mesad from base of each tooth, between toothbase glands, folds longer and more robust at posterior end of puparium. Longitudinal moulting suture reaching puparial margin, its middle onethird part distinctly keeled; transverse moulting sutures terminating in subdorsum, opposite median part of abdominal segment I, but their confluence with the longitudinal suture is so far anterior as to be almost contiguous with suturelike mesometathoracic division. Dorsal disc with cuticle generally rather smooth; cephalic region defined by pair of oblique subdorsal folds; median part of abdomen raised to form rhachis (Fig. 101), with very finely spinulose cuticle; lateral to rhachis, 4 major pairs of folds are directed posteriad at an acute angle to median line of puparium; anterior to these folds a much shorter pair of folds is confluent with raised part of segment I; abdominal segment VII not reduced in length medially. Vasiform orifice ( Fig. 11 View FIGURES 9–12 ) cordate, slightly elevated, about as long as wide, but fringed posteriorly by a finely rugose “skirt”, giving orifice an apparently trapezoidal outline at lower magnifications, orifice inset from puparial margin by slightly more than its own length; operculum roundedhexagonal, almost fully occupying vasiform orifice; lingula with head little wider than shaft, globose, surface finely spinulose and bearing 2 apical setae, usually just lingular head extending beyond boundary of vasiform orifice. Pockets (submedian abdominal segment VII/VIII boundary) hardly evident. Chaetotaxy. Posterior marginal setae present, hairlike; anterior marginal setae not always evident but then shorter than posterior pair. Submedian setal pairs ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 9–12 ) as follows: cephalic, robust, thickened, often curved, 70 m in holotype; metathoracic, thickened but long and rather ribbonlike, 140 m in holotype; eighth abdominal, extremely broad, daggerlike, apically acute or occasionally bifid (80 m, with one bifid, in holotype, fig. 11); caudal, very long and fine, 150 m in holotype. Outer submargin, between longitudinal moulting suture and a point opposite median part of abdominal segment II, with 7 pairs of tiny setae (the anteriormost 6 pairs depicted in Fig. 10 View FIGURES 9–12 ), these difficult to see if margin downcurled. Pores. Dorsal disc provided with pore/ porette geminate pairs, themselves fairly regularly paired on each side of body, one or two pairs on each segment of rhachis; outer subdorsum with uneven row of pore/porettes (approximately 17 on each side of puparium in holotype); one tiny porette present immediately mesal to some marginal toothbase glands ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 9–12 ), and slightly further mesad is a row of slightly larger pores (but these pores and porettes not apparently geminate), approximately one pore or porette to each 4–6 toothbase glands. Venter. Ventral abdominal setae long, fine, similar to posterior marginal pair, underlying midpoint between vasiform orifice and pockets. Each leg with one minute basal spine, often more difficult to see on front legs. Antennal bases anteromesal to fore legs, antennae smoothsided, slightly acute apically and shorter than front legs. Tracheal folds absent.
ADULT FEMALE ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 9–12 ). Body 1.2–1.3 mm long (n=6). Antennae 0.35 mm long, 7segmented, segment II 3X segment I in length; segments III, V, VI & VII each with an elongate uncinula (terminology of BinkMoenen, 1983), rather thickly setalike, but that on segment VI much shorter and finer than remainder ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 9–12 ); segment III with two, segments V & VII each with one, protuberant subapical sensorium (possibly equivalent to the lachneait of BinkMoenen’s terminology); segment VII terminating in a process similar in length to remainder of segment. Abdomen with 2 pairs of large ventral wax plates, each about 0.18 mm wide. Wings with venation typical for Aleyrodinae , each with only a simple main vein; fore wings elongateoval, 2.75 times longer than wide. Vasiform orifice subcircular to ovoid; lingula acute apically, without an obvious pair of apical setae. One tarsal claw clearly larger and thicker than the other on each leg; tarsal paronychium acutespatulate when viewed laterally, but appearing like a third claw when viewed vertically. [Adult male unknown.]
MATERIAL EXAMINED. Holotype puparium, BELIZE, CFR, on Lasiacis sp. (Poaceae) , 22.iii.2003 (J.H.Martin #7782) ( BMNH). Paratypes: 89 puparia, 29 thirdinstar larvae, exuviae of 6 secondinstar and 2 firstinstar larvae, 6 adult females, same data as holotype, or same host and locality, 22.iii.2003, 28.iii.2003 & 05.iv.2003 (Martin) ( BMNH, USNM); dry puparial material on leaf blades, same data as holotype ( BMNH).
ETYMOLOGY. The species name is the latin laneus (meaning woolly), describing the fine, filamentous tangle secreted by each puparium.
COMMENTS. A. laneus is clearly a member of the A. mundururu group, differing from A. mundururu Bondar principally in possession of a pair of cephalic setae which are similar to broad, daggerlike, eighth abdominal setae ( A. mundururu has no cephalic setae, and its eighth abdominal setae are long and fine, hairlike), and in the marginal toothbase glands being longer than wide, more uneven in size than they are in A. mundururu .
Aleurotulus laneus shares its host in the CFR with Aleurocybotus cereus . The puparia of both species are obscured by flocculent secretions and appear quite similar prior to slidemounting, but are unmistakeable when examined microscopically. The adult females of the two species have very different antennal segments ( Figs 12 View FIGURES 9–12 , 2 View FIGURES 1–8 respectively) and microscopic recognition of adults alone should be possible. Adult males of Aleurotulus laneus have not been seen, but are also likely to be easily distinguished from those of Aleurocybotus cereus . Also sharing the same grass host is Trialeurodes abdita (q.v.).
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
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