A new species of Dialeurolobus (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) from Protea nitida in South Africa
Author
Millar, I. M.
Author
Dooley, J. W.
text
Zootaxa
2013
3694
2
178
184
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3694.2.7
628526b0-a15f-43a7-b0e1-afe3d4b74cb8
1175-5326
220728
1FCE5CE1-4E3F-46B5-B7AC-F712D9F56180
Dialeurolobus proteae
sp. nov.
(
Figs 1–9
)
PUPARIUM
Habitus
. Body colour black, requiring bleaching (
Fig. 9
); puparia distributed sparsely on underside of leaf. Sparse powdery wax present on dorsum.
Margin
. Outline broadly oval, 1.20–1.86 [1.60] mm long by 1.01–1.60 [1.36] mm wide, with the
holotype
being
1.86 mm
long,
1.60 mm
wide, 1.16 times longer than wide, widest at A3 (third abdominal) segment (n=17). Margin evenly crenate, with 6–8 rounded teeth per
0.1 mm
of margin; 4–7 slightly smaller teeth at thoracic (
Fig. 7
) and abdominal tracheal openings.
Dorsum
. Boundary between submedian and subdorsal areas of dorsal disc not distinctly indicated. Longitudinal moulting suture extending up to the basal border of the submargin; transverse moulting sutures extending to and terminating near submargin; metathoracic suture present and extending to but not overlapping the mesothoracic legs. Submargin to the subdorsum with linear pattern that is straight and parallel; subdorsum to submedian roughened. Thoracic and abdominal segmentation clearly marked submedially, rachis present; abdominal segment VII reduced by 5 µm in length medially; abdominal segment VIII trilobate; each abdominal segment with pair of slightly elongated depressions. Vasiform orifice elongate-cordate, 72.6–92.6 [83.6] µm long by 50–82 [69.7] µm wide, with inner edges ridged, anterior half with fine stipples. Operculum elongate-triangular, 56.9–72.6 [66.0] µm long by 47.9–67.8 [61.2] µm wide with rounded angles, occupying most of orifice and covering lingula; head of lingula globular, 47.4–63.6 [57.8] µm long by 19.1–27.8 [24.4] µm wide, finely setose with a pair of subapical setae.
Pores
. Paired geminate pore with associated porette present with collars and separated from each other by a distance of about 1–3 times the diameter of the pore (
Fig. 1
); distributed over dorsal disc from median to the submargin, where the pores are arranged in an irregular row of one to two pairs with some pores having two porettes associated with each.
Chaetotaxy
. Anterior and posterior marginal setae present (most broken off). Anterior marginal setae 9.7–14.6 [11.2] µm long; posterior marginal setae 8.6–34.3 µm long. Submedian dorsal area comprises single pairs of cephalic setae 6.7–12 [9.6] μm long (most broken off) and 8th abdominal setae 6.1–19.5 [10.5] μm, each hair fine, pointed and curved; subdorsal chaetotaxy comprises 8 pairs of similar setae, 7–13 [10] μm long, arranged in a line extending around puparium, with 3 pairs on the thorax and 5 on the abdomen.
Venter
(
Fig. 1
). Cuticle diaphanous, with cellular/areolate pattern through subventral area, smooth submedially. Thoracic and caudal tracheal folds apparent. Ventral abdominal setae placed on either side of anterior angles of vasiform orifice, finely pointed and 16–25 μm long. Legs with apical adhesive pad; each leg with a small basal seta, slightly longer than its base. Antennae extending approximately to podite of middle legs; antennal bases placed anterior to fore legs.
Material examined.
HOLOTYPE
. Puparium on slide,
SOUTH AFRICA
, Western Cape, Cedarberg Nature Reserve, approx. 32˚25’S 19˚05’E,
10.xii.1991
, C. Roux, on
Protea nitida
(Proteaceae)
, HAl 76 (SANC).
PARATYPES
. 21 puparia on 11 slides, same data as
holotype
(SANC), 2 puparia on 2 slides (BMNH), 2 puparia on 2 slides (USNM), 6 puparia on 3 slides (PPQC); 2 puparia on 2 slides, collected in Quarantine from
South Africa
on
Protea
flowers on
5.iii.2001
at Los Angeles Plant Inspection station, Hawthorne, Ca,
USA
, reference laxca010711601640 (PPQC), 1 slide (BMNH).
Additional, non-type material.
8 dry specimens
in situ
on leaf fragments glued to 5 card platforms on pins, same data as
holotype
(SANC).
Distribution.
Only known to occur in the Western Cape Province of
South Africa
.
Host plant.
Protea nitida
Mill. (Proteaceae)
. This plant is endemic to
South Africa
, where it occurs in the Western and Eastern Cape provinces. It is a large, common
protea
species that grows into a tree, and is valued for its showy flowers and timber (Coates Palgrave, 2002).
Etymology.
The name is derived from the host plant genus,
Protea
.
Comments.
Dialeurolobus proteae
sp. nov.
differs from the other three species in this genus mainly by the morphological characters mentioned in the key below. It is most similar to
D
.
rhamni
, but has fewer pairs of setae in the submargin/subdorsum area, and more teeth in the tracheal combs. It also lacks eyespots, a caudal furrow, and caudal setae; all of these structures are present in
D
.
rhamni
. Also, the transverse moulting sutures in
D
.
rhamni
are curved abruptly anteriad, whereas in
D
.
proteae
they are more conventional in shape.