An illustrated guide to lady beetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) of the Indian Subcontinent. Part 1. Tribe Coccinellini
Author
POORANI, J.
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-08-18
5332
1
1
307
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5332.1.1
journal article
264199
10.11646/zootaxa.5332.1.1
66e0ec51-d494-43d4-965e-a2cd1462ef54
1175-5326
8261502
424F7439-4095-46A5-93E3-C4130E3B6D9A
Coccinella transversalis
Fabricius
(
Figs 57
,
58
)
Coccinella transversalis
Fabricius, 1781: 97
(
Lectotype
female, BMNH; Type locality: Coromandel);
Poorani 2002a: 326
;
Ślipiński
et al
. 2020: 33
.
Coccinella repanda
Thunberg, 1781: 18
(
Lectotype
female, UUZM ZIU; Type locality:
Cape
of Good Hope).—Synonymized by
Mulsant 1850: 1022
; Crotch 1871: 3; 1874: 117;
Korschefsky 1932: 483
;
Ślipiński
et al
. 2020: 33
.
Coccinella contempta
Boisduval, 1835: 592
(
Type
locality:
Australia
;
type
not found).—Synonymized by
Mulsant 1850: 1022
;
Pope 1989: 652
, 653;
Ślipiński
et al
. 2020: 33
.
Diagnosis.
Length:
3.80–6.70 mm
; width:
3.30–5.50 mm
. Form elongate oval, convex. Head black with a pair of creamy yellow, subtriangular frontal spots, one on either side of inner margins of eyes. Pronotum black, anterolateral corners light cream. Scutellar shield black. Elytra bright carmine red or orange or yellow (
Figs 57d, e
;
58j–o
), with an oval subscutellar spot, a large trilobed spot on humeral callus, a transverse band at apical third not reaching lateral margin, and three smaller apical spots-one sutural and two lateral, usually fused to form a transverse marking; sutural line with an irregular black stripe. Elytral pattern variable with the markings in various states of confluence or reduction (
Fig. 58l
). Spermatheca (
Fig.
57g
) and male genitalia (
Fig. 57h–k
) as illustrated.
Immature stages.
Life stages as illustrated (
Figs 57a–c
,
58
). Larva (
Figs 57a, b
;
58b–g
) dark greyish to black with pinkish / orange / yellowish spots. Pupa (
Figs 57c
,
58h, i
) orange with black markings.
Distribution.
One of the most common coccinellids of the region and found almost throughout
India
;
Nepal
;
Bhutan
;
Sri Lanka
;
Myanmar
; Southeast Asia;
China
; Asia Pacific;
Australia
;
New Zealand
.
Prey/associated habitat.
Commonly associated with aphids infesting grasses. Also found on several crops like groundnut, rice, cotton, sunflower, safflower, mustard, cowpea, cabbage, maize, sorghum, watermelon, wheat, brinjal, bhendi, lucerne, etc. Smart weed (
Polygonum hydropiper
) harbours it in large numbers. Known hosts include:
Aphididae
:
Acyrthosiphon pisum
(Harris)
,
Aphis affinis
Del Guercio
,
Aphis craccivora
Koch
,
Aphis gossypii
Glover
,
Aphis nerii
Boyer de Fonscolombe
,
Aphis spiraecola
Patch
,
Brachycaudus helichrysi
(Kaltenbach)
,
Brevicoryne brassicae
(Linnaeus)
,
Cervaphis quercus
Takahashi
,
Cervaphis rappardi indica
Basu
,
Lipaphis pseudobrassicae
(Kaltenbach)
,
Macrosiphoniella yomogifoliae
(Shinji)
,
Macrosiphum euphorbiae
(Thomas)
,
Macrosiphum rosae
(Linnaeus)
,
Melanaphis donacis
(Passerini)
,
Melanaphis sacchari
(Zehntner)
,
Myzus nicotianae
Blackman
,
Myzus persicae
(Sulzer)
,
Pentalonia nigronervosa
Coquerel
,
Rhopalosiphum maidis
(Fitch)
,
Sitobion rosaeiformis
(Das)
,
Taoia indica
(Ghosh & Raychaudhuri)
,
Aphis (Toxoptera) aurantii
Boyer de Fonscolombe
,
Therioaphis ononidis
(Kaltenbach)
,
Therioaphis trifolii
(Monell)
,
Uroleucon compositae
(Theobald)
,
Uroleucon sonchi
(Linnaeus)
;
Cicadellidae
:
Empoascanara indica
(Datta)
,
Idioscopus clypealis
(Lethierry)
;
Ortheziidae
:
Orthezia insignis
Browne
;
Psyllidae
:
Diaphorina citri
Kuwayama.
Delphacidae
:
Nilaparvata lugens
Stal.
Lepidoptera
:
Noctuidae
:
Helicoverpa armigera
(Ḩbner),
Spodoptera litura
(Fabricius)
.
Seasonal occurrence.
Present throughout the year with several overlapping generations. Active during July– November in south
India
.
Natural enemies.
Dinocampus coccinellae
(Schrank)
,
Tetrastichus
sp.
,
Coccipolipus macfarlanei
Husband
,
Coccipolipus
sp.
Note.
Kovář (2007)
considered
C. transversalis
as a subspecies of
C. leonina
Fabricius, 1775
, a species endemic to
New Zealand
. This was followed by Abdolahi
et al
. (2018). However,
Ślipiński
et al
. (2020)
treated
C. leonina
and
C. transversalis
as distinct species in their revision of Australo-Pacific
Coccinellini
and the male genitalia of
C. leonina
are also different from those of
C. transversalis
.
Numerous papers have been published on its bioecology, some of the notable ones include:
Puttarudriah & Channabasavanna (1953)
—brief notes on biology, hosts; Kapur (1962)—geographical variations in elytral pattern, illustrations;
Sasaji (1971)
,
Pope (1989)
—detailed description, illustrations; Debaraj & Singh (2000)—field recognition of life stages;
Roy (1976)
,
Joshi
et al
. (1999)
—biology;
Yu (2010)
—description, illustrations of life stages.