An illustrated guide to the lady beetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) of the Indian Subcontinent. Part II. Tribe Chilocorini
Author
POORANI, J.
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-11-27
5378
1
1
108
https://www.mapress.com/zt/article/download/zootaxa.5378.1.1/52353
journal article
294804
10.11646/zootaxa.5378.1.1
8a6ca207-2c3f-4770-bfd4-f83ad6e6e426
1175-5334
10208917
68976F75-EC46-480B-AB8A-061B1441A958
Brumoides suturalis
(Fabricius)
(
Figs 17–21
)
Coccinella suturalis
Fabricius, 1798: 78
.
Brumus suturalis
:
Mulsant 1850: 494
;
Korschefsky 1932: 267
.
Brumoides suturalis
:
Chapin 1965: 237
;
Poorani 2002: 310
.
Brumus daldorfii
Crotch, 1874: 21
.
Brumoides daldorfii
:
Kovář 2007: 592
;
Dorji
et al
. 2019: 503
.
Brumoides kolhapurensis
Sathe & Bhosale, 2001: 28
. Synonymized by
Poorani 2005: 186
.
Diagnosis.
Length:
3.50–3.80 mm
; width: 2.70–3.00 mm. Form (
Fig. 17a–d
) oval, dorsum convex. Head and pronotum orange yellow. Scutellar shield black. Elytra satiny white to creamy yellow, with three black vittae / stripes, one on each elytron in a mid-dorsal position not extending to apex and one sutural stripe not extending to apex, apical portion yellowish to reddish brown. Ventral side yellow except metaventrite and first abdominal ventrite dark brown to black, ventrite 2 dark brown except lateral sides paler, yellowish. Legs fully yellow or variable as follows: yellow except 3rd and 4th tarsomeres of all legs brownish, basally and apically darker brown to black, hind coxae more or less black, hind femora medially black, metatibiae and occasionally mesotibiae with outer margins black. Maxilla with terminal palpomere yellow except posterolateral corners dark brown to black. Anterior clypeal margin medially emarginate. Antenna (
Fig. 17f
) 8-segmented, short, antennomeres distinctly wider than in
B. lineatus
,
terminal antennomere often dark brown apically. Interspaces between punctures on head and pronotum with reticulate sculpture, those on elytra with microsculpture. Tarsal claws simple (
Fig. 18e
). Abdominal postcoxal line complete, of somewhat variable depth (
Fig. 18a–d
). Last visible abdominal ventrite posteriorly emarginate in male and narrowly rounded in female.
Male
genitalia (
Fig. 18f–m
) as illustrated, penis guide distinctly shorter and reaching only a short distance beyond middle, apically asymmetrical (
Fig.18f, g
); penis with a prominent capsule (
Fig. 18i, j, k
), penis apex (
Fig. 18l, m
) as illustrated. Female genitalia (
Fig. 18n
) with a characteristic infundibulum distinctly longer and tubular; spermatheca (
Fig. 18o
) as illustrated.
Externally similar to
B. lineatus
and can be differentiated from it by the slightly more elongate body outline, distinctly narrower elytral vittae (less than half as wide as elytral width), antennae with broader antennomeres and the genitalia of both sexes are also diagnostic.
Life stages.
Life stages as illustrated (
Figs 19
,
20
). Eggs (
Fig. 19a
) creamy white to pale yellow with distinct microsculpture on chorion. Larva (
Fig. 19b–d
) pale yellowish to darker yellowish brown or grey (
Fig. 20a–f
), with prominent, blackish thoracic plates and spiny dorsal protuberances. Pupa (
Figs 19e
,
20g
, h
) variable in coloration, pale yellow to much darker.
Distribution.
Widespread almost throughout
India
(
Andhra Pradesh
; Goa; Jammu & Kashmir;
Karnataka
;
Kerala
;
Manipur
; Punjab;
Tamil Nadu
;
Uttar Pradesh
; Uttarkhand;
West Bengal
).
Nepal
.
Bhutan
.
Sri Lanka
.
Pakistan
. Introduced and established in parts of Hawaii.
Prey/associated habitat.
Polyphagous and feeds on aphids, whiteflies, psyllids, scales, mealybugs and mites.
Gorham (1894)
reported its feeding on pollen of grasses.
Specific host records are as follows:
Hemiptera
:
Aleyrodidae
:
Aleurocanthus woglumi
Ashby
,
Aleurolobus barodensis
(Maskell)
,
Aleurolobus citrifolii
Corbett
,
Bemisia tabaci
(Gennadius)
,
Dialeurodes elongata
Dozier
,
Dialeurodes citri
(Ashmead)
,
Neomaskellia andropogonis
Corbett
,
Trialeurodes ricini
(Misra)
,
Aleuroclava pentatuberculata
(Sundarraj & David)
.
Aphidoidea
:
Acyrthosiphon pisum
(Harris)
,
Adelges
sp.
,
Aphis affinis
Del Guercio
,
Aphis craccivora
Koch
,
Aphis fabae
Scopoli
,
Aphis gossypii
Glover
,
Aphis nerii
Boyer de Fonscolombe
,
Asiphonella cynodonti
(Das)
,
Brachycaudus pruni
(Koch)
,
Dactynotus carthami
(Hille Ris Lambers)
,
Uroleucon compositae
(Theobald)
,
Hyalopterus atriplicis
(Linnaeus)
,
Hyadaphis coriandri
(Das)
,
Lipaphis pseudobrassicae
(Kaltenbach)
(as
L. erysimi
(Kaltenbach))
,
Myzus persicae
(Sulzer)
,
Rhopalosiphum nymphaeae
(Linnaeus)
,
Therioaphis trifolii
(Monell)
,
Aphis
(
Toxoptera
)
aurantii
Boyer de Fonscolombe.
Cicadellidae
:
Empoasca kerri
Singh-Pruthi
,
Hishimonus phycitis
(Distant)
,
Nephotettix virescens
(Distant)
,
Orosius albicinctus
Distant
, groundnut jassids.
Coccoidea
:
Coccidohystrix insolita
(Green)
,
Comstockaspis perniciosa
(Comstock)
(=
Quadraspidiotus perniciosus
(Comstock))
,
Ferrisia virgata
(Cockerell)
,
Phenacoccus
sp.
,
Pseudococcus cryptus
Hempel
(as
P. citriculus
Green
),
Pseudococcus saccharicola
Takahashi
,
Pseudococcus
sp.
,
Maconellicoccus hirsutus
(Green)
,
Gannaspis glomerata
(Green)
,
Nipaecoccus viridis
(Newstead)
,
Trabutina
(as
Naiacoccus
) sp.
Delphacidae
:
Nilaparvata lugens
(Stål)
,
Sogatella furcifera
(Horvath)
.
Lophopidae
:
Pyrilla perpusilla
(Walker)
,
Pyrilla
spp.
Psyllidae
:
Diaphorina citri
Kuwayama
,
Psylla isitis
Cotes.
Lepidoptera
:
Crambidae
:
Chilo partellus
(Swinhoe)
.
Pyralidae
: eggs of
Scirpophaga excerptalis
(Walker)
.
Noctuidae
:
Earias vittella
(Fabricius)
,
E. insulana
(Boisduval)
, early instar larvae of
Helicoverpa armigera
(Hübner)
.
Diptera
:
Anthomyiidae
:
Atherigona soccata
Rondani.
Acari
:
Tetranychidae
:
Oligonychus coffeae
(Nietner)
(as
Tetranychus bioculatus
Wood-Mason
),
Tetranychus urticae
Koch
(as
T. neocaledonicus
Andre
). Feeds on pollen of
Echinocloa colona
on rice field bunds (Shanker
et al.
2018).
Collected on a wide range of host plants including sugarcane, maize, brinjal, rice, wheat, cotton, bhendi, cowpea, groundnut, sunflower, safflower, sesamum, coconut, pigeonpea, castor, sorghum, cabbage, indigo, peach, cumin, mustard, lucerne, tobacco, sandal, pongamia, crotalaria, rice bean, coriander, soyabean, bittergourd, Japanese mint,
Citrus limon
,
Euryale ferox
,
Thevetia neriifolia
,
Triumfetta
s
p.,
Achyranthes aspera
,
Tribulus terrestris
,
Abutilon indicum
,
Parthenium hysterophorus, Lathyrus
sativus
, and
Sida spinosa
(label data).
Seasonal occurrence.
It is active throughout the year, except extreme winter (
Chandrababu
et al
. 1997a
). Abundant on brinjal mealybug infestations almost throughout the year (
Puttarudriah & Channabasavanna 1957
). It can be mass produced in the laboratory on
Ferrisia virgata
on potato sprouts.
Natural enemies.
Larvae (
Fig. 21a
) and pupae are parasitized by encyrtid and chalcid parasitoids such as
Homalotylus hemipterinus
De Stefani (Dalman)
(
Hymenoptera
:
Encyrtidae
) (
Fig. 21b
) and
Lasiochalcidia
sp.
(
Hymenoptera
:
Chalcididae
) (
Fig. 21c
).
Notes.
Crotch (1874: 21)
listed
Brumus daldorfii
Crotch
as a replacement name for
Coccinella suturalis
Fabricius, 1798
as it was supposed to be preoccupied in
Olivier (1791)
(
Coccinella suturalis
Olivier, 1791: 50
, from “Indes orientales”). The combination
Brumoides daldorfii
(Crotch)
has not been used in any publication except Kovář’s Palaearctic checklist (2007) and Dorji
et al
.’s (2019) checklist of
Coccinellidae
of
Bhutan
. It is unclear why this name has not been used in any major works.
Brumoides suturalis
remains the most popular and widely known name for this species and it is used here to avoid confusion.
It is one of the most well studied
Chilocorini
of the
Indian
region because it is commonly found in agroecosystems in association with several major pests. In north-eastern
India
, it is less common than
B. lineatus
and both coexist in northern states of
India
and in the north-eastern region,
B. lineatus
is more predominant.
Several publications are available on its biology, hosts, predatory potential, mass production and use in applied biological control. Some notable works are as follows:
Stebbing 1903
(description of adult, brief notes on life history);
Kapur 1939
,
1942
(bionomics, description of immature stages with illustrations);
Puttarudriah & Channabasavanna 1953
,
1956
(brief notes on biology, hosts);
Garg & Sethi 1984
(population dynamics, effect of insecticides);
Chandrababu
et al
. 1999
(biology), 1996 (economics of production), 1997b (feeding potential), 1997c (toxicity of insecticides);
Gautam 1990
(mass production technique).
Poorani & Lalitha (2018)
,
Rafi
et al
. (2005)
and
Hayat
et al
. (2014)
provided bried diagnostic and biological details on
B. suturalis
.