A study of the scale insect genera Puto Signoret (Hemiptera: Sternorrhyncha: Coccoidea: Putoidae) and Ceroputo Šulc (Pseudococcidae) with a comparison to Phenacoccus Cockerell (Pseudococcidae)
Author
Han, Sarah I.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2802
1
22
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.207286
2be57930-4fab-46ee-9089-27e49ec71c95
1175-5326
207286
Ceroputo pilosellae
Šulc
Ceroputo pilosellae
Šulc, 1898
: 2
.
Ceroputo elvirae castneri
Schumacher, 1917
: 429
. Nomen nudum; discovered by
Lindinger, 1935
: 131
.
Phenacoccus tomlini
Green, 1930
: 320
. Synonymy by
Marotta and Tranfaglia, 1993
: 188
.
Phenacoccus asteri
Takahashi, 1932
: 43
.
Syn. nov.
Erium tomlini
;
Lindinger, 1935
: 122
. Change of combination.
Phenacoccus ferrisi
Kiritshenko, 1936: 140
. Synonymy by
Danzig, 1999
: 89
.
Phenacoccus euphorbiaefolius
Bodenheimer, 1943
: 17
. Synonymy by
Ben-Dov and Kaydan, 2008
: 285
.
Phenacoccus poterii
Bodenheimer, 1943
: 32
. Synonymy by
Ben-Dov and Kaydan, 2008
: 285
.
Ceroputo ferrisi
;
Borchsenius, 1949
: 287
. Change of combination.
Ceroputo pannosus
Borchsenius, 1949
: 288
. Synonymy by
Tereznikova, 1975b
: 32
.
Ceroputo clematidis
Matesova, 1957
: 165
. Synonymy by
Danzig, 1999
: 89
.
Leococcus erigeroneus
Kanda, 1959
: 240
. Synonymy by
Tang, 1992
: 388
, 391.
Puto pilosellae
;
Tereznikova, 1975a
: 243
. Change of combination.
Puto erigeroneus
;
Kawai, 1980
: 96
. Change of combination.
Puto clematidis
;
Kozár and Walter, 1985
: 72
. Change of combination.
Puto euphorbiaefolius
;
Kozár and Walter, 1985
: 72
. Change of combination.
Puto ferrisi
;
Kozár and Walter, 1985
: 72
. Change of combination.
Puto poterii
;
Kozár and Walter, 1985
: 72
. Change of combination.
Puto asteri
;
Tang, 1992
: 405
. Change of combination.
Phenacoccus asteri
;
Ben-Dov, 1994
: 309
. Revived combination.
Puto jarudensis
Tang, 1992
: 600
.
Syn. nov.
We examined
13 adult
females identified as
C. pilosellae
that were collected in “
Czechoslovakia
,”
France
,
Hungary
,
Poland
and
Slovakia
. We also have examined a slide with an adult female intercepted at New York from
England
on
Gentiana andrewsii
collected
May 12, 1936
, by Lennox but, because this species has never been collected in the
UK
, the locality data are suspect. In this species, the eyes are about the same height as the length of first antennal segment. We have examined specimens with 8- and 9-segmented antennae. The intersegmental sensilla are variable and often obscure and difficult to see. It appears that they are variably present between segments III– IV, IV–V and VI–VII. One specimen appears to have sensilla between the above mentioned segments as well as V– VI and VIII–IX. The legs are shorter than those in
Puto
and possess fewer setae; campaniform sensilla on the trochanters always number two on each surface; the claws are thick and short and lack basal spurs, and the digitules are clubbed. Tubular ducts are present on the frons. Trilocular pores on the venter are smaller than those on the dorsum, and pores in the cerarii are only slightly larger than those on the rest of the dorsum.
First-instar nymphs collected in
Hungary
(Budapest, Sashegy,
18.x.1996
, in caricetum habitat by B. Kiss) and examined by Ferenc Kozár, and embryos collected in
Turkey
(Hakkari-Beyköy, on
Euphorbia sequeriana
(Euphorbiaceae)
,
1832 m
) and examined by M. Bora Kaydan, all possess 6 antennal segments. We agree with
Hardy
et al
. (2008)
that this species should be retained in the genus
Ceroputo
in the family
Pseudococcidae
. This species has a wide distribution in the Palaearctic Region (
Ben-Dov & Kaydan, 2008
).
Kanda (1959)
described
Leococcus erigeroneus
,
collected from
Erigeron canadensis
(Asteraceae)
in
Japan
, as the
type
species of his genus
Leococcus
.
Kawai (1980)
transferred the species to
Puto
, thus treating
Leococcus
as a junior synonym of
Puto
.
Danzig (1980)
suggested that
L. erigeroneus
was probably a synonym of
P. pilosellae
but did not formally list it as such.
Tang (1992)
appears to have been the first to formally cite
L. erigeroneus
as a junior synonym of
C. pilosellae
. We have studied the description and illustration given by
Kanda (1959)
and we conclude that the species is identical to
C. pilosellae
.
Takahashi (1932)
described
Phenacoccus asteri
for specimens collected on
Aster lauruleanus
(Asteraceae)
in
Taiwan
. It was transferred to
Puto
by
Tang (1992)
, but the original combination was revived by
Ben-Dov (1994)
.
We have examined the original illustration and description of this species and regard the species name to be identical to
C. pilosellae
, with which we here synonymise it.
We have not studied specimens of
Puto jarudensis
Tang
described from
China
on
Kalimeris integrifolia
(Asteraceae)
. The description and illustration given by
Tang (1992)
, however, leaves little doubt that the species is identical to
C. pilosellae
.
Tang (1992)
points out that
P. jarudensis
has two sizes of tubular ducts, with larger ones mainly in the ventral median areas of the head and thorax, and smaller ones on the ventral abdomen. Although existing descriptions of
C. pilosellae
(
Danzig, 1980
;
Kosztarab & Kozár, 1988
;
Marotta & Tranfaglia, 1993
) do not provide details of the size of the ventral ducts, the specimens of
C. pilosellae
from Europe that we have examined have larger tubular ducts on the head and thorax than those on the abdomen, in agreement with Tang’s description of
P. jarudensis
.