Impatientinum (Impatientinum) balsamines ( Kaltenbach, 1862 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.37828/em.2023.63.9 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13246998 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AE3F65-166D-FFE2-62CB-FBA6628C9E0E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Impatientinum (Impatientinum) balsamines ( Kaltenbach, 1862 ) |
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Impatientinum (Impatientinum) balsamines ( Kaltenbach, 1862) View in CoL
( Figs 10–13, 18–19 View Figures 10–20 )
Material: Hungary, Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén county, Bükk Mts, Miskolc-Lillafüred, Herman Ottó Emlékház , garden, Impatiens parviflora DC. , 345 m a.s.l., N 48.09727° E 20.62161°, leg. Sz. Czigány, A. & D. Murányi, 10.viii.2019, viviparous apterous females, larvae GoogleMaps ; Hungary, Heves county, Bükk Mts, Nagyvisnyó, Bán-valley , beech forest, Impatiens parviflora DC. , 390 m a.s.l., N 48.1285° E 20.4688°, leg. Sz. Czigány, A. & D. Murányi, 5.viii.2017, viviparous apterous females, viviparous alate females, larvae GoogleMaps ; Hungary, Heves county, Mátra Mts, Mátraszentimre-Galyatető , beech forest, Impatiens noli-tangere L., 960 m a.s.l., N 47.91738° E 19.92013°, leg. A. & D. Murányi, Á. Turóci, 31.vii.2019, viviparous apterous females, viviparous alate females, larvae GoogleMaps ; Hungary, Nógrád county, Mátra Mts, Pásztó-Mátrakeresztes , forest edge, Impatiens parviflora DC. , 390 m a.s.l., N 47.90451° E 19.80915°, leg. A. & D. Murányi, Á. Turóci, 31.vii.2019, viviparous apterous females, viviparous alate females, larvae GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis. Dark greenish Impatientinum with mostly pale, striped legs, black siphunculi and pale cauda. Aptera with height of antennal tubercles about 0.3 × length of first antennal segment; secondary rhinaria on antennal segments: III 6–9, IV 3–4, V 3–4; siphunculi with reticulation on the apical fifth, length 0.8 of head width across eyes; cauda with rounded apex; antennal PT/BASE 4.1–4.5.
Distribution and ecology. Usually forms small colonies on undersides of leaves of Impatiens spp. , most common on I. noli-tangere . Most probably of east Asian origin, now widely distributed in Europe and Asia. Monoecious holocyclic with alate males. There are several monophagous aphids known from touch-me-not species, but in Hungary, only Impatientinum asiaticum Nevsky, 1929 was reported from the small balsam, together with the polyphagous Aphis (Aphis) fabae Scopoli, 1763 ( Ripka & Csiszár 2008, Ripka 2011). The latter species was noted from unspecified Impatiens species as well ( Szalay-Marzsó 1989, Basky 2005). The Hungarian specimens of I. balsamines were mostly collected from the invasive alien small balsam ( I. parviflora DC. ) and was found only once from the native touch-me-not balsam ( I. noli-tangere L.), despite that in Europe the species usually spread on the touch-me-not balsam ( Blackman & Eastop 2023). The habitats were mostly natural forests where the weed spread along forest roads. The colonies were not always ant attended and of a rather variable size, mostly on the inflorescence and the upper stem. The colonies contained both alatae and apterae forms during the whole summer.
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