Towards identification of the scale insects (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha) of continental Africa: 2. Checklists and keys to six archaeococcoid families
Author
Watson, Gillian W.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-03-04
5105
3
301
356
journal article
20341
10.11646/zootaxa.5105.3.1
797fca93-60bf-40ce-bb55-e5cb695f6356
1175-5326
6332761
187B04D7-4C35-4E27-9B2D-A616BF59F380
Family
MARGARODIDAE Cockerell
Common names:
Ground pearls or margarodids.
Background:
In the early literature (e.g.,
Morrison 1928
;
Borchsenius 1960
), the ancient family
Margarodidae
sensu lato
contained species showing an enormous range of morphological and biological variation.
Koteja (1974)
first proposed breaking the
Margarodidae
sensu lato
into six families, based on the structure of the labium, whereas
Hodgson and Foldi (2006)
subsequently recognized 11 families, based on male morphology. The name
Margarodidae
sensu stricto
is now applied to a family group of ten genera containing 109 described species (
Foldi 2005a
;
Miller
et al.
2014
;
García Morales
et al.
2016
). The species are all highly adapted for life underground, spending part of the life cycle as a dormant cyst in the soil (a “ground pearl”) (de
Klerk
et al.
1983
; Gavrilov-Zimin 2018). The cyst stage can live for multiple years and is an adaptation to survive long periods of drought when the host plant cannot grow (
Miller
et al.
2014
). Adult females have relatively uniform morphology, but the immature stages show a dramatic diversity of structural details. Historically, some species of
Porphyrophora
were used as sources of valuable red dyes for textiles (
Vahedi and Hodgson 2007
). The
Margarodidae
of Africa have not been well studied and there may well be more, undescribed species still to be found.
Appearance in life:
Normally found in soil or sand, usually on roots of annual grasses or perennial shrubs or trees, but early in the growing season crawlers sometimes found infesting grass leaves. Body of adult female large, length up to 5.0 mm or more, generally rotund, but some species elongate oval. Mouthparts normally absent; anterior legs enlarged for digging (fossorial); usually without wax secretions apart from a filamentous wax ovisac produced in some species. Cyst of immature female ovoid, amber yellow to dark brown, sometimes appearing iridescent or metallic, surface often textured.
Identification:
The best specimens for identification are young adult females just after the final moult, before the body has become distended with developing eggs. Adult female (
Fig. 2
) large, up to 5.0 mm long or more, normally without mouthparts; anal opening not obvious. Forelegs greatly enlarged for digging through soil, often with some leg segments fused; each tarsus with more than one campaniform sensilla. Abdominal spiracles usually present (occasionally absent); thoracic spiracles each usually with pores in atrium. Cicatrices absent in adult female, occasionally present in cyst stage (de
Klerk
et al
. 1983
;
Miller
et al.
2014
).
Economic importance:
In
South Africa
,
Margarodes capensis
,
M. prieskaensis
and
M. vredendalensis
are becoming increasingly important as pests on grapevines (de
Klerk
et al.
1983
). Infestation causes patches of vines to die, and vineyards can be destroyed. Ground-pearl feeding devitalizes the vines through sap depletion and possibly by injection of salivary toxins. Infested vines gradually decline; shoots become progressively thinner and shorter and leaves sparser, and after five or six years the vine may die (de
Klerk
et al.
1983
). In South America,
Margarodes vitis
is a serious pest of grapevines (
González 1983
). Unlike an infestation of grapevine phylloxera (
Daktulosphaira vitifoliae
,
Hemiptera: Aphidomorpha
:
Phylloxeridae
), in ground pearl infeststions no root galls are formed (de
Klerk
et al.
1983
). In the Middle East,
Porphyrophora tritici
(Bodenheimer)
is a pest of wheat (
Vahedi 2001
).
Biology:
The underground habit of margarodids makes them difficult to study so their biology is not well known. In at least some species, the life cycle can take several years and includes at least
one immature
instar that forms a dormant cyst to survive adverse conditions like drought (
Fig. 3
). In some species, the only time spent above ground is a brief period as adults for mating, whereas some other species reproduce parthenogenetically. Margarodids occur on various hosts, from annual grasses to perennial shrubs and perhaps even trees, usually feeding on the roots, but early in the year the crawlers of some species infest the leaf sheaths of grasses.
Porphyrophora tritici
, a pest of wheat in the Middle East, has one generation annually and overwinters as eggs in an ovisac underground. On hatching, the crawlers climb into grass leaf sheaths and feed there for 30‒45 days; then they return to the soil and moult into the cyst stage, which feeds on grass roots for 30‒45 days. During this stage there are up to 12 moults before the adult female emerges to mate above ground, then returning to the soil to produce an ovisac and eggs at a depth of
3‒4 cm
(
Durán 1971
;
Vahedi 2001
).
FIGURE 2.
Margarodidae
, morphology of adult female;
Dimargarodes tanganyicus
Jakubski
from
Vahedi & Hodgson (2007: 32
, Fig. 3), reproduced with permission © Trustees of the Natural History Museum, London, U.K.
FIGURE 3.
The life cycle of ground pearls (
Margarodidae
), from
Foldi (2005a: 90
, Fig. 2), reproduced with permission from Annales de la Société entomologique de France.
Checklist and distributions of
Margarodidae
in continental Africa
(5 genera, 25 species)
Dimargarodes tanganyicus
Jakubski
:
Tanzania
Margarodes aurelianus
(Hall)
:
Sudan
Margarodes cadeti
Foldi
:
Burkina Faso
Margarodes capensis
(Giard)
:
South Africa
Margarodes congolensis
Jakubski
:
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Margarodes greeni
Brain
:
South Africa
Margarodes newsteadi
(Brain)
:
South Africa
Margarodes peringueyi
(Brain)
:
South Africa
Margarodes prieskaensis
Jakubski
:
Namibia
,
South Africa
Margarodes ruber
(Brain)
:
South Africa
Margarodes salisburiensis
(Hall)
:
Zimbabwe
Margarodes trimeni
Giard
:
South Africa
Margarodes upingtonensis
de Klerk
:
South Africa
Margarodes vredendalensis
de Klerk
:
South Africa
Margarodes williamsi
(Jakubski)
:
Ghana
Margarodesia desmieri
Foldi
:
Ivory Coast
Neomargarodes aethiopicus
Silvestri
:
Eritrea
Neomargarodes aristidae
Borchsenius
:
Algeria
,
Libya
Neomargarodes erythrocephalus
Green
:
Algeria
,
Sudan
,
Western Sahara
Neomargarodes hyparrheniae
Hall
:
Zimbabwe
Neomargarodes pilosus
(Jakubski)
:
South Africa
Neomargarodes trabuti
Marchal
:
Algeria
,
Tunisia
Porphyrophora buxtoni
(Newstead)
:
Algeria
Porphyrophora erythraea
Silvestri
:
Eritrea
Porphyrophora hirsutissima
(Hall)
:
Egypt
,
Morocco
Porphyrophora libica
Silvestri
:
Libya
Porphyrophora parieli
(Vayssière)
:
Morocco
Porphyrophora rhodesiensis
Hall
:
Zimbabwe
Key to genera of
Margarodidae
in continental Africa, adult females
1(0) Prothoracic leg with claw base developed into a distinct, sclerotised heel. Abdominal spiracles numbering 8 pairs.........................................................................................
Neomargarodes
(
Fig. 4
)
- Prothoracic leg with claw base not developed into a distinct, sclerotised heel. Abdominal spiracles numbering 0‒7 pairs... 2
2(1) Antennal segments without setae except for a group on apical segment. Abdominal spiracles numbering 0‒2 pairs, situated on anterior abdominal segments if present..................................................
Porphyrophora
(
Fig. 5
)
- Antennal segments each bearing at least 1 whorl of setae. Abdominal spiracles numbering 2‒6 pairs................... 3
3(2) Abdominal spiracles numbering 7 pairs.....................................................
Margarodes
(
Fig. 6
)
- Abdominal spiracles numbering 2 or 6 pairs................................................................ 4
4(3) Abdominal spiracles numbering 6 pairs, all same size. Body margin with pleural extensions bearing spines, setae and pores. Venter with distinct groups of spines, setae and pores. Hosts unknown for the African species........
Dimargarodes
(
Fig. 2
)
- Abdominal spiracles numbering 2 pairs (on anterior abdominal segments), anteriormost largest. Body margin smooth and with numerous setae, without pleural extensions or spines. Venter with short conical spines, setae and pores but not in distinct groups. On roots of oil palm in
Ivory Coast
................................................
Margarodesia
(
Fig. 7
)