<documentid="D928DD76D857C30861D6D91C836D18F9"ID-CLB-Dataset="34814"ID-DOI="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.312.5506"ID-GBIF-Dataset="ee24a5eb-28b4-4518-ae0e-d3ccfbc98680"ID-PMC="PMC3698567"ID-Pensoft-Pub="1313-2970-312-79"ID-PubMed="23825449"ModsDocAuthor=""ModsDocDate="2013"ModsDocID="1313-2970-312-79"ModsDocOrigin="ZooKeys 312"ModsDocTitle="First record of the aphid genus Jacksonia Theobald (Hemiptera, Aphididae, Aphidinae) from China, with description of one new species"checkinTime="1451247179879"checkinUser="pensoft"docAuthor="Li, Xing-Yi, Zhang, Bin, Su, Xiao-Mei & Qiao, Ge-Xia"docDate="2013"docId="BDD81AA6D5CD3CDD5697EDE385A07977"docLanguage="en"docName="ZooKeys 312: 79-87"docOrigin="ZooKeys 312"docSource="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.312.5506"docTitle="Jacksonia Theobald 1923"docType="treatment"docVersion="5"lastPageNumber="80"masterDocId="F755FFC55E0FFFDAFFC4DA005372FFF4"masterDocTitle="First record of the aphid genus Jacksonia Theobald (Hemiptera, Aphididae, Aphidinae) from China, with description of one new species"masterLastPageNumber="87"masterPageNumber="79"pageNumber="79"updateTime="1732939489862"updateUser="ExternalLinkService">
<mods:titleid="CF0145777A24BBC076B224870ECDF057">First record of the aphid genus Jacksonia Theobald (Hemiptera, Aphididae, Aphidinae) from China, with description of one new species</mods:title>
<bibRefCitationid="017ACCD375381B5FE3B619258A86EB0F"author="Theobald, FV"journalOrPublisher=","pageId="6"pageNumber="85"pagination="19 - 20"title="A new genus and two new species of aphides from Ross-Shire. Scot. Nat."volume="1923"year="1923">Theobald 1923</bibRefCitation>
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<bibRefCitationid="8D99F378D6075F39085CDAE138335561"author="Remaudiere, G"journalOrPublisher="Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Paris"pageId="6"pageNumber="85"title="Catalogue des Aphididae du Monde."year="1997">
<bibRefCitationid="37278FE20827ED09C50D5194FE77B6AD"author="Blackman, RL"journalOrPublisher="John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Chichester, England"pageId="5"pageNumber="84"title="Aphids on the World's Herbaceous Plants and Shrubs."year="2006">: 105; Blackman and Eastop 2006</bibRefCitation>
<paragraphid="9B3CDA85BE8CDFE4CCB4B24A297B3D73"pageId="0"pageNumber="79">In apterous viviparous female: Body broadly elongate. Head scabrous, with dense spinules or warts on dorsum and venter. Antennal tubercles well developed, strongly converging, broad and covered with many warts; medial frontal tubercle indistinct. Antennae 6-segmented, shorter than body, antennal segments I-V with distinct warty imbrications, primary rhinaria non-ciliated or ciliated. Ultimate rostral segment wedge-shaped, with 2 or 3 accessory setae. Distal 2/3 of femora and bases of tibiae with warty imbrications, hind tibiae of nymphs without spinules. First tarsal chaetotaxy 3, 3, 2, or 3, 3, 3. Antennal and dorsal body setae short, blunt or acute at apex. Dorsum of body scabrous; pale or with dark bands on abdominal tergites VI-VII. Siphunculi cylindrical, wide at base, narrow at middle and again becoming wide, with oblique or central aperture lacking a flange, with scabrous imbrications. Distance between 6th and 7th spiracles much less than that between 5th and 6th. Cauda tongue-shaped, with blunt apex, shorter than siphunculi, with 4-6 setae. Anal and genital plates broadly circular, genital plate with 6-19 posterior setae and 2 anterior setae.</paragraph>
In alate viviparous female: Dorsum of head smooth or sparsely to densely spinulose, venter smooth. Frontal setae with acute apices. Antennal segments I-V with normal imbrications, segments III-V with small or large round or transverse oval secondary rhinaria. Fore wings with two-forked medial veins, hind wings with 2 oblique
. Abdominal tergites with brown or blackish brown spino-pleural and marginal patches, spino-pleural patches on tergites III-V usually fused to form a large dorsal patch. Others similar to apterae.
); in regions with temperate oceanic climates throughout the world, including many oceanic islands (e.g. Iceland, Faroes, Azores, Auckland Is., Macquarie Is., South Georgia) (
<bibRefCitationid="53E979A2E8BDC78320EDADBCFBA421BB"author="Blackman, RL"journalOrPublisher="John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Chichester, England"pageId="5"pageNumber="84"title="Aphids on the World's Herbaceous Plants and Shrubs."year="2006">Blackman and Eastop 2006</bibRefCitation>
Passerini, 1860, but apterae can be distinguished from the latter by the peculiarly shaped siphunculi and the very broad antennal tubercles. The genus is also very similar to