Antonina thaiensis Takahashi 1942
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5194.2.4 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DA49F564-620C-46E1-839A-D4A3B0136B3B |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7147434 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/432D5F6B-FFBF-FFA2-6BAC-FD3A2F14F845 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Antonina thaiensis Takahashi 1942 |
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Antonina thaiensis Takahashi 1942 View in CoL
Antonina thaiensis Takahashi 1942: 15 View in CoL ; 1951: 21; Ali 1970: 101; Ben-Dov 1994: 42; Hendricks & Kosztarab 1999: 123; Williams 2004: 78.
Antonina zonata Takahashi 1951: 21 View in CoL .
Material examined: INDIA, Karnataka, Bengaluru: Yelahanka, Gandhi Krishi Vigyan Kendra, N 13.0801°, E 77.5785°, on Bambusa vulgaris Schrad. ex J.C. Wendl. (Poaceae) , 24.viii.2016, B. Manjunath coll., 10 ♀♀; Dollars colony, N 13.0415°, E 77.5684°, on B. vulgaris , 25.iv.2018, Sunil Joshi coll., 9 ♀♀; Hebbal, Bhuvaneshwari Nagar, N 13.0545°, E 77.6036°, on B. vulgaris , 25.iv.2018, Sunil Joshi coll., 4 ♀♀; Ganesh Nagar Layout, Kodigehalli, N 13.0697°, E 77.5788°, on B. vulgaris , 19.v.2021, R. R. Rachana coll., 18 ♀♀.
Appearance in life ( Fig. 1e View FIGURE 1 ): Adult females form dense colonies near the internodes of bamboos, usually inside the leaf sheaths. Adult female dark brown, partially covered in white wax on anterior end, abdominal dorsum without wax coating but body resting on a cushion of white wax, perhaps secreted by ventral dermal pores. Body elongate, almost parallel sided with rounded ends, and with a long white wax tube projecting from posterior end. Immature stages reddish brown.
Diagnosis of slide-mounted adult female (n=41): Body elongate- to broadly oval ( Fig. 7q View FIGURE 7 ); anal lobes weakly developed. Abdominal segments VI–VIII highly sclerotized laterally; mature female becoming heavily sclerotized throughout. Antennae each 2 segmented ( Fig. 7a View FIGURE 7 ). Legs and leg vestiges, eyes and ostioles absent. Anal ring situated at inner end of anal tube ( Fig. 7b View FIGURE 7 ), bearing 6 thick pointed setae. Vulva directed posteriorly, with heavily sclerotized lateral apophyses ( Fig. 7c View FIGURE 7 ) and weakly sclerotized posterior apophyses.
Dorsum: With short, pointed setae ( Fig. 7d View FIGURE 7 ). Marginal setae conical ( Fig. 7e View FIGURE 7 ).
Venter: Multilocular disc pores ( Fig. 7f View FIGURE 7 ), each with 10–12 loculi, present around margins, scattered on head and prothorax and a few present near median areas of posterior abdominal segments and within orifice of anal tube. Trilocular pores ( Fig. 7g View FIGURE 7 ) thick-rimmed, fairly numerous on head, thorax, and anterior abdominal segments, forming almost elongate groups across segments and around margins of meso- and metathoracic segments and abdomen. Discoidal pores of 2 sizes, each with a heavily sclerotized rim ( Fig. 7h View FIGURE 7 ) and smaller than a trilocular pore. Tubular ducts of 2 sizes: a large type ( Fig. 7i View FIGURE 7 ), with a narrow flange and transverse, almost quadrate inner end, sparsely present near margins of abdominal segments VII and VIII, and together with multilocular disc pores situated internally within orifice of anal tube; and a small type of duct ( Fig. 7j View FIGURE 7 ), with almost quadrate inner end, fairly numerous on abdominal segment VII, associated with groups of trilocular pores. With short, pointed setae ( Fig. 7k View FIGURE 7 ) similar to those on dorsum, longer on posterior abdominal segments ( Fig. 7l View FIGURE 7 ); a pair of thick apical setae present. Disc-like pores ( Fig. 7m View FIGURE 7 ), each with a thick rim and reticulated surface, numerous in submarginal groups on metathorax and abdominal segments II and III; some pores also present between anterior and posterior spiracles. Multilocular disc pores same as those on dorsum, a few present immediately posterior to vulva ( Fig. 7n View FIGURE 7 ); others forming medial transverse rows on abdominal segment III and posterior segments, and a band around margins and submargins ( Fig. 7o View FIGURE 7 ) as far forward as head. Multilocular disc pores present also on thorax, on area surrounding each anterior spiracle and some reaching posterior spiracles; others sparsely distributed on medial areas of thorax. Discoidal pores ( Fig. 7p View FIGURE 7 ) of same 2 types as those on dorsum, scattered.
Comparison: Our diagnosis mostly agrees with the description and illustration by Williams (2004).
Ecological notes: Antonina thaiensis was first described from Thailand ( Takahashi 1942) and was later recorded in Malaysia in the 1940s ( Takahashi 1951), Indonesia (Java) in 1957 ( Sartiami et al. 2016) and more recently in Sri Lanka ( Sirisena et al. 2012); this suggests that the species is slowly spreading from Southeast Asia to southern Asia, infesting mainly species of bamboos, and hence may spread to different parts of India where ornamental bamboos are commonly grown in parks and gardens. The parasitoid Microterys imphalensis Singh & Hayat ( Hymenoptera : Encyrtidae ) ( Fig. 7n View FIGURE 7 ) was found parasitizing the mealybug in fairly large numbers. No other natural enemies have been recorded from A. thaiensis from other parts of the world. Microterys imphalensis was described by Singh & Hayat (2002) from Manipur on an unknown host. The present record of this parasitoid attacking A. thaiensis is its first host record, as well as a new distribution record for southern India. No ant species was observed attending the mealybug.
R |
Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile |
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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Antonina thaiensis Takahashi 1942
Joshi, Sunil, Gupta, Ankita, Shashank, P. R., Pai, Sachin G., Mohan, M., Rachana, R. R., Dubey, Vinod Kumar, Sandeep, Angalakuditi & Deepthy, K. B. 2022 |
Antonina zonata
Takahashi, R. 1951: 21 |
Antonina thaiensis
Williams, D. J. 2004: 78 |
Hendricks, H. & Kosztarab, M. P. 1999: 123 |
Ben-Dov, Y. 1994: 42 |
Ali, S. M. 1970: 101 |
Takahashi, R. 1951: 21 |
Takahashi, R. 1942: 15 |