Proposal of new specific status for tea-infesting populations of the nominal citrus spiny whitefly Aleurocanthus spiniferus (Homoptera: Aleyrodidae)
Author
Kanmiya, Kenkichi
Author
Ueda, Shigenori
Author
Kasai, Atsushi
Author
Yamashita, Koji
Author
Sato, Yasushi
Author
Yoshiyasu, Yutaka
text
Zootaxa
2011
2797
25
44
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.205633
0d22ce6b-091e-4be1-bf74-ef801750c8c4
1175-5326
205633
Genus
Aleurocanthus
Quaintance &
Baker
, 1914
Aleurocanthus
Quaintance &
Baker
, 1914
: 102
.
Type
species:
Aleurodes spinifera
Quaintance, 1903
: 63
–64, by original designation.
Aleurocanthus
Quaintance and
Baker
:Quaintance and
Baker
, 1917
(15 spp. worldwide). —
Corbett, 1935
(8 spp. from
Malaysia
). —
Takahashi, 1942
(8 spp. from
Thailand
). —
Takahashi, 1956
(3 spp. from
Micronesia
). —
David and Subramaniam, 1976
(14 spp. from
India
). —
Dubey and Sundararaj, 2005
(31 spp. from
India
). —
Martin, 1987
(5 spp. of worldwide pests). —
Martin, 1999
,
2005
(generic diagnosis).
Generic diagnosis.
The genus
Aleurocanthus
Quaintance &
Baker
is readily recognised in puparium by many stout glandular spines on the dorsal disc and submargin, and the usual carriage of exuviae of earlier instars in a stack on the dorsum, as well as white marginal waxy fringes.
Martin (1987)
prepared a key to a few species of this genus which infest economically important plants. The key included detailed figures of five species, including
A. spiniferus
.
Puparium medium in size, subelliptical or oblong in outline, colour usually dark brown to black and often fringed with white waxy secretion marginally. Margin distinctly crenulate or truncate-lobulate; submarginal area not separated from dorsum by suture. Thoracic and caudal tracheal folds and combs not discernible from dorsal view; dorsal disc and/or submargin covered with stout glandular spines of various length with acute or fimbriate apices; cephalic, 8th abdominal and caudal setae present; caudal furrow absent. Vasiform orifice small, subcircular or subcordate in outline, highly elevated as a tubercle-like projection of dorsum; operculum elliptical, almost filling orifice; lingula visible or concealed. Adult forewing usually dusky having several paler maculae, with radius and cubitus, and a prominent flexure present at the branch of R1 (vestigial) and Rs suddenly curving posteriorly at the branch beyond mid-wing length; hind wing with only radius, prominent maculation absent.
Remarks.
The genus currently contains around 80 described species worldwide (
Martin & Mound 2007
;
Evans 2008
). It is well represented in the Oriental region, with about 50 described species. In
Japan
, only two species,
A. cinnamomi
Takahashi, 1931
and
A. spiniferus
(Q., 1903) are currently distributed (
Miyatake 1980
). The outbreak population currently infesting tea plants and that on citrus plants, which has been long established, have hitherto both been called
A. spiniferus
in
Japan
,
China
and
Taiwan
. The first observation that the host plant preference of Japanese tea-infesting population differs from that of the citrus-infesting population of
A. spiniferus
(
Kasai
et al
. 2010
)
led to this investigation of possible differences in species recognition between them based on morphometric, bioacoustic and genome analyses, as discussed below.
TABLE 1.
Geographic origin, collection date and host plants of sample populations used for morphometric analysis.
Species Acronym Geographic origin (prefecture) Host Plant Date n
A. camelliae
Uji
† Uji (Kyoto)
Ca. sinensis
24 July 2009
21 Kyoto* Kyoto (Kyoto)
Ca. sasanqua
4
Apr. 2010 22
Ohchi† Ohchi (Shimane)
Ca. sinensis
15 July 2009
6 Yame † Yame (Fukuoka)
Ca. sinensis
23
Sept. 2009 12
Yame * Yame (Fukuoka)
Ca. sinensis
18
Dec. 2009 23
A. spiniferus
Shizuoka* Shizuoka (Shizuoka)
Ci. unshiu
22
Feb. 2010 12
Shimizu* Shizuoka (Shizuoka)
Ci. unshiu
16
Apr. 2010 24
Kyoto† Kyoto (Kyoto)
Ci. unshiu
25
Apr. 2009 12
Seiyo* Seiyo (Ehime)
Ci. unshiu
29
Apr. 2010 17
Chikugo† Chikugo (Fukuoka)
Ci. natsudaidai
23
Nov. 2009 10
Karatsu† Karatsu (Saga)
Ci. unshiu
20 July 2009
18
*Width of fringe wax measured from live samples. †Number of marginal crenulations, body length and body width measured from samples in ethanol.