A review species of the genus Ceroplastes (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) in China
Author
Wu, San-An
Author
Wang, Xubo
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-12-03
4701
6
520
536
journal article
24749
10.11646/zootaxa.4701.6.2
a0dcf616-a4ad-49d4-b35f-dd53a90c8ac7
1175-5326
3562574
FD1478CC-463B-4CB9-B3A2-20C0CD047149
Ceroplastes floridensis
Comstock, 1881
(
Fig. 4
)
Ceroplastes floridensis
Comstock,
Kuwana, 1927: 71
;
Yang, 1982: 187
;
Wang, 2001: 392
.
Paracerostegia floridensis
;
Tang, 1991: 306
.
Material examined.
FUJIAN
:
12 ♀♀
, Yong-an, on
Cinnamomum japonicum
(Lauraceae)
,
12.ii.2011
, coll. Jianqin Wu;
7 ♀♀
, Youxi, on
C. japonicum
,
26.iv.2011
, coll. Kaiju Wei.
GUANGDONG
:
5 ♀♀
, Zhaoqing, on
C. japonicum
,
16.iv.2012
, coll. Jun Deng, Ying Wang & Haibin Li;
16 ♀♀
, Jieyang, on
C. burmanni
(Lauraceae)
,
9.iv. 2011
, coll. Shaobin Huang;
12 ♀♀
, Shaoguan, on
Ficus microcarpa
(Moraceae)
,
14.iv.2012
, coll. Jun Deng, Ying Wang and Haibin Li.
SICHUAN
:
12 ♀♀
, Chengdu, on
Elaeocarpus sylvestris
(Elaeocarpaceae)
,
30.iv.2012
, coll. Jun Deng, Ying Wang & Haibin Li.
GUANGXI
:
15 ♀♀
, Liuzhou, on
Cinnamomum japonicum
,
23.iv.2012
, coll. Jun Deng, Ying Wang & Haibin Li.
Distribution in
China
.
This species has a wide distribution in both tropical and temperate regions of world (
Williams & Watson 1990
).
Comstock (1881)
felt that it was native to Florida, but
Cockerell (1895)
and
Gimpel
et al
. (1974)
considered that it was native to the West Indies; however,
Tang (1991)
believed this species to be native to the Oriental region.
Qin
et al.
(1998)
gave no definite native area based on their phylogenetic and biogeographical analysis. We agree with Tang’s view because its close relatives [i.e.
C. ajmerensis
(Avasthi)
,
C. centroroseus
,
C. japonicus
, and
C. kunmingensis
, as well as the new species described below (all of which have: dorsum without a median clear area, ventral tubular ducts, each duct with a short, very swollen inner ductile, present in submarginal band extending from near each antenna to near each anal lobe)], are all known only from eastern and southern Asia. In China,
C. floridensis
has been recorded from many places, as far north as
Tianjin
(
Wu 1935
;
Wang 2001
; and other papers), but
Yang (1982)
only recorded it from
Yunnan
and Taiwan.
Zhang and Zhao (1996)
considered that
C. japonicus
had been incorrectly identified as
C. floriensis
in China before, and that
C. floridensis
did not occur in
Jiangxi
; however, today it is known in East, South and Southwest China (see specimens examined). The earlier records in other regions were probably either misidentifications of
C. japonicus
or from where it occurred in greenhouses.
Host-plants.
Ceroplastes floridensis
is polyphagous. For the distribution in
China
mentioned above, the early host-plant records need to be confirmed. The determined hosts include 26 species of 19 families:
Mangifera indica
(Anacardiaceae)
,
Typonium divaricatum
(Araceae)
,
Schefflera octophylla
(Araliaceae)
,
Ilex cornuta
(Aquifoliaceae)
,
Canarium album
(Burseraceae)
,
Dianthus caryophyllus
(Caryophyllaceae)
,
Diospyros kaki
(Ebenaceae)
,
Elaeocarpus sylvestris
(Elaeocarpaceae)
,
Cinnamomum japonicum
,
C. burmanni
,
Lindera megaphylla
(Lauraceae)
,
Ficus microcarpa
,
Ficus
sp. (
Moraceae
),
Psidium guajava
(Myrtaceae)
,
Osmanthus fragrans
var.
semperflorens
(Oleaceae)
,
Trachycarpus fortunei
(Palmae)
,
Pinus
sp. (
Pinaceae
),
Eriobotrya japonica
,
Malus pumila
(Rosaceae)
,
Gardenia jasminoides
(Rubiaceae)
,
Citrus reticulata
,
C. maxima
,
Murraya exotica (
Rutaceae)
,
Dimocarpus longan
(Sapindaceae)
,
Camellia sinensis
,
Schima superba
(Theaceae)
(
Huang & Huang 1988
;
Li 1994
;
Wu 2011
;
Wei 2011
, and this study). Preferred hosts include
Cinnamomum japonicum
,
Citrus reticulata
,
Gardenia jasminoides
and
Malus pumila
.
Biology.
Ceroplastes floridensis
has one generation per year on
Malus pumila
in Kunming
city,
Yunnan Province
; and two generations a year on
Cinnamomum japonicum
,
Citrus reticulata
,
and
Gardenia jasminoides
in
Fujian Province
, where it overwinters as adult females or third-instar nymphs. No males were found. The immature stages occur on leaves and twigs before migrating back to twigs during the late third instar (
Huang & Huang 1988
;
Li 1994
;
Wu 2011
;
Wei 2011
).
Remarks.
Ceroplastes floridensis
is close to
C. centroroseus
,
C. japonicus
and
C. kunmingensis
. It can be distinguished from
C. centroroceus
by presence of multilocular pores near each procoxa; from
C. japonicus
by the absence of multilocular pores near to each stigmatic atrium and presence of a continuous line of 6–18 bristle-shaped marginal setae between the stigmatic clefts on each side; and from
C. kunmingensis
by the cephalic and posterolateral clear areas being undivided and the claw digitules unequal.