A new species of mealybug (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Pseudococcidae) from Tectona grandis L. f. (Lamiaceae) in southern India
Author
Joshi, Sunil
Author
Jose, Bindu K.
Author
Gullan, Penny
Author
Sajeev, T. V.
Author
Anoop, E. V.
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-01-07
4718
3
391
400
journal article
24418
10.11646/zootaxa.4718.3.7
22a109e7-7d0f-41d4-adf0-6f5be8a7374e
1175-5326
3602550
51AB6842-F063-4580-B30F-65102ABA797C
Formicococcus lingnani
(Ferris)
revived combination
Planococcus lingnani
Ferris 1954: 52
.
Planococcoides lingnani
Williams 1970: 163
. Change of combination.
Formicococcus lingnani
Williams 2004: 290
. Change of combination.
Paraputo lingnani
Danzig & Gavrilov-Zimin 2015: 18
. Change of combination.
Formicococcus lingnani
was redescribed by
Williams (1970)
from material collected from
Malaysia
,
China
and
Thailand
; he found these materials to be in agreement with the original material from
China
, with minor morphological differences, hence in
Williams (2004)
he made two illustrations based on specimens from
China
and
Thailand
. He further suggested inclusion of this species in
Exallomochlus
Williams
because of the presence of a sclerotized area on the dorsum and venter of each anal lobe, but retained it in
Formicococcus
because of the presence of anal lobe bars each connected to an anal lobe bar seta. The species has been collected on
Cyperus rotundus
L. (
Cyperaceae
) and
Areca catechu
L. (
Arecaceae
) from
Karnataka
,
India
(S. Joshi, unpublished data).
Danzig & Gavrilov-Zimin (2015)
transferred the species to
Paraputo
Laing
because it has 6 anal ring setae, which is not justifiable based on the facts provided on the revived combination of
F. robustus
in the discussion above.
The only molecular phylogenetic study (
Hardy
et al
. 2008
) that has included examples of
Paraputo
found that the sampled African species was not related to the sampled Neotropical species. There appear to have been no molecular phylogenetic studies including species of
Formicococcus
. The taxonomy of
Formicococcus
and
Paraputo
may change in the future if informative new data become available; however, the stability of nomenclature is important to users and changes should be avoided unless there is strong justification.