A new genus and two new species of soft scale insect (Sternorrhyncha, Coccoidea, Coccidae) from Africa
Author
Hodgson, Chris
National Museum of Wales ,, United Kingdom
text
ZooKeys
2008
2008-09-16
3
3
57
76
journal article
10.3897/zookeys.3.45
e4de6594-5075-4058-895e-67eb0e3004e3
1313–2970
576418
CBCD770C-79A0-4A53-9C35-DCD7A1A32A14
Hemilecanium
Newstead
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:
2DEA755F-A46A-4203-B3B8-893324D22FAF
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:
7FB67D8F-AAA7-427B-AF54-53D64A52B87A
The genus
Hemilecanium
was introduced by
Newstead (1908)
to take
H. theobromae
, collected off cacao in
Cameroon
. Prior to 2005,
Hemilecanium
contained 4 species:
H. coriaceum
Hall
,
H. imbricans
(Green)
,
H. recurvatum
Newstead
and the
type
species. Since then however, there have been major changes in the species composition of
Hemilecanium
,
most notably when Kondo and Hardy recently (2008) synonymised
Etiennea
Matile-Ferrero
(
type
species
E. villiersi
Matile-Ferrero
) with
Hemilecanium
, based on a comparative morphological study of the adult females, adult males and 1
st-
instar nymphs of 4 species of
Hemilecanium
and 6 species of
Etiennea
. The study also included a phylogenetic analysis based on adult female and 1
st-
instar nymphal characters. These changes brought the total number of species in
Hemilecanium
to 26. Earlier,
Hodgson (1994)
had drawn attention to the morphological similarities of
Etiennea
and
Hemilecanium
(both genera having dorsal tubular ducts with funnel-like apertures and both with two centres of sclerotisation on the dorsum) but had considered that they could be easily separated due to the presence of cribriform plates on
Hemilecanium
(absent on
Etiennea
species). However,
Kondo and Williams (2005)
showed that 4 cribriform plates were present on the dorsum of the 1
st-
instar nymphs of several
Hemilecanium
species so that the 1
st-
instar nymphs of
E. villiersi
and
H. theobromae
were very similar.
Despite these changes, the species within the new concept of
Hemilecanium
can be divided into two groups based on the structure of the 1
st-
instar nymphs. These are referred to as the
petasus
and
thoebromae
groups by
Kondo and Hardy (2008)
. The 1
st-
instar nymphs are only known for nine of the species now included in
Hemilecanium
but these can be separated as follows: the
petasus
group is diagnosed by the presence of: (i) the dorsum without clusters of 4-locular pores; (ii) each spiracular pore band with 2-4 spiracular disc-pores; (iii) each femur with a very long seta near apex (only on the prothoracic leg of
H. uesatoi
), and (iv) each stigmatic cleft with 3 well-developed stigmatic spines. The
petasus
group includes
H. ferox
(Newstead)
,
H. montricardiae
(Newstead)
,
H. multituberculatum
(Hodgson)
,
H. petasus
(Hodgson)
,
H. sinetuberculum
(Hodgson)
and
H. uesatoi
Kondo & Hardy. The
theobromae
group, on the other hand, has the following combination of characters: (i) dorsum with 4 clusters of 4-locular pores; (ii) each spiracular pore band with 1 spiracular disc-pore; (iii) very long setae absent from all femora, and (iv) stigmatic spines absent. It includes
H. imbricans
,
H. mangiferae
Kondo & Williams
,
H. theobromae
and
H. villiersi
. As pointed out by Kondo and Hardy, these two groups are also supported by a single adult female character, with those in the
theobromae
group lacking stigmatic spines while those in the
petasus
group have well-developed stigmatic spines. This suggests that the present composition of
Hemilecanium
may be paraphyletic. This was understood by Kondo and Hardy who go on to say (2008, p. 212) “We need data on first-instar nymphs of additional species to determine whether these two crawler
types
and their associated adult females will correspond to reciprocally monophyletic groups”.
Below is described a further species which is here being tentatively placed in
Hemilecanium
. Although the 1
st-
instar nymphs fulfil the 4 character-states for the
petasus
group discussed above, they also have an apparently unique character – 1-4 coneshaped or flap-like triangular structures medially on most segments.