Biology of Aproida balyi Pascoe, 1863 (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Cassidinae: Aproidini) on its host plant, Eustrephus latifolius R. Br. ex Ker-Gawl (Asparagaceae) in Australia
Author
Monteith, Caroline S. Chaboo Vivian E. Sandoval-Gómez Mariana Hopper Geoff B.
text
Insecta Mundi
2024
2024-10-04
2024
74
1
28
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.14662640
1942-1354
14662640
025EBD5A-4914-47FE-A33C-1A668B2F440C
Notes on
Aproida monteithi
Samuelson, 1989
(
Fig. 4–11
,
17
)
Known from only the male
holotype
(
Fig. 4–8
) and female
paratype
(
Fig. 9–11
), in QMBA, collected together and with data as on pictured labels. The type and only known locality (
Fig. 14
,
17
) is Thornton Peak which is the highest point of the Thornton Uplands sector of the Wet Tropics Biogeographic Region of
Australia
(
Bryant and Krosch 2016
;
Yeates and Monteith 2008
), The Thornton Uplands is bordered by the Bloomfield River valley to the north and the Daintree River valley to the south. Thornton Peak has many other insect endemics and a summary of them and history of collecting there, with additional photographs, are given by
Theischinger (2019)
.
Samuelson (1989)
described mouthparts and genitalia (
Fig. 6–7
) from the dissected
holotype
. The male does not have modifications of the protibia and profemora as seen in
A. cribrata
and
A. balyi
. The female
allotype
was not dissected but he inferred it was female based on differences in the abdominal apex. The antennae have two apical antennomeres cream, contrasting with the dark brown basal articles.