A review of the Margarodidae sensu stricto (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha) in China, with descriptions of three new species
Author
Zheng, Xinyi
0000-0002-7396-7488
The Key Laboratory for Silviculture and Conservation of Ministry of Education, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, China.
Author
Wu, San’An
0000-0002-9671-9401
The Key Laboratory for Silviculture and Conservation of Ministry of Education, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, China.
sananwu@bjfu.edu.cn
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-09-10
5506
4
451
500
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5506.4.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5506.4.1
1175-5326
B1D3C8F1-DA52-477A-93B9-A0B7F054866D
Genus
Margarodes
Guilding, 1829
Margarodes
Guilding, 1829: 118
, accepted valid name.
Margarodes
(
Sphaeraspis
)
Giard, 1894: 412
, junior synonym.
Sphaeraspis
Giard;
Fernald 1903: 28
, change in status (level).
Promargarodes
Silvestri, 1938b: 21
, junior synonym.
Acystomargarodes
Bodenheimer, 1953: 152
, an unavailable name.
Type
species:
Margarodes formicarum
Guilding, 1829
.
Generic diagnosis
Adult female:
Body broadly oval; derm membranous. Antennae each 7 or 8 segmented, cylindrical; each segment with hair-like setae and sensory setae; pedicel short. Blunt spines present, anterior spines longer than posterior ones. Eyespots and mouthparts absent. Thoracic spiracles developed, each with apodeme present; each spiracle with a group of perispiracular sensilla laterad to peritreme; abdominal spiracles numbering 6 or 7 pairs; thoracic and abdominal atria all containing multilocular disc-pores. Foreleg fossorial; with short coxa, trochanter with campaniform sensilla on each lateroventral face, femur strongly developed, tarsus + claw fused, with campaniform sensilla dorsally, and claw strongly sclerotized, and bifurcate in some species. Middle and hind legs slightly smaller, each similar in structure to foreleg. Anal opening simple. Multilocular disc-pores each with inner ring of few large or small loculi, outer ring containing many small loculi.
Comments:
Adult female
Margarodes
can be distinguished from those of other genera of hypogeal margarodids by having the following major characters (contrasting character states in
Neomargarodes
and/or
Porphyrophora
are given in parenthesis): (i) abdominal spiracles numbering 6 or 7 pairs (8 pairs in
Neomargarodes
, 0 or 2 pairs in
Porphyrophora
); (ii) thoracic and abdominal spiracles each with multilocular disc-pores and simple pores in atrium (only thoracic spiracles contain atrial pores in
Porphyrophora
); (iii) presence of spines (spines absent in
Neomargarodes
and
Porphyrophora
);(iv) antennae each7or 8segmented and slender(6segmented in
Neomargarodes
and 7‒18 segmented in
Porphyrophora
); (v) foreleg claws each with 1 or 2 protrusions at base, or simple, without protrusions (base of foreleg claw with prominent heel and sometimes protrusions in
Neomargarodes
, simple in
Porphyrophora
); and (vi) eyespots absent (present in
Porphyrophora
).
One species of this genus has been recorded in south
China
on the roots of grasses.