Valid Names Results
Apiomorpha gullanae Cook, 2003 (Eriococcidae: Apiomorpha)Nomenclatural History
- Apiomorpha gullanae Cook 2003: 327-333. Type data: AUSTRALIA: Queensland, 2 km. SW of Dunmore State Forest Station (27º35'S, 151º05'E, on Eucalyptus sideroxylon, 5/2/1995, by L.G. Cook. Holotype, female, by original designation Type depository: Canberra: Australian National Insect Collection, CSIRO Entomology, Australia; accepted valid name Notes: Additional material from the hologype specimen includes frozen gut tissue and genomic DNA stored in the School of Botany and Zoology at The Australian National University.
Common Names
Ecological Associates
Hosts:
Families: 1 | Genera: 1
Geographic Distribution
Countries: 1
- Australia
- Queensland | Cook2003
Keys
Remarks
- Systematics: The bilobed anal lobes of the adult female of Apiomorpha gullanae readily distinguish it from other species of Apiomorpha, which all possess a pair of sclerotised long single-lobed anal lobes. The medial lobe is much shorter than the lateral lobe; a cluster of robust spines with fanned bases occur medially on the dorsum of the thorax and abdominal segments I-VII; middle and hind legs of approximately the same length; a curvilinearly tapered body. Galls of females resemble those of the A. pharetrata species group, are cigar-shaped, up to 13 mm long and 3 mm wide, and occur only on leaves. Crawlers have simple pores; a feature found only in crawlers of the A. pharetrata. Otherwise, the adult females and crawlers do not closely resemble those of the A. pharetrata.
- Structure: Adult female: Abdomen curvilinealy tapered to anal lobes; Eyes conspicuous, anterio-lateral to forelegs. Anal lobes moderately sclerotized, comprising a pair of medial lobes and a pair of lateral lobes. Lateral lobes taper near apex and terminate in 2 subequal spines. First-instar nymph: Body discoidal, yellow with darker horizontal patches in life.
- Biology: Reporduction in A. gullanae is probably parthnogenetic, and it may represent the first known occurrence of asexual reproduction in Apiomorpha.
- General Remarks: Detailed description, illustration and photographs in Cook (2003).
Illustrations
Citations
- Cook2003: description, distribution, host, illustration, life history, phylogeny, physiology, structure, taxonomy, 327-333
- Kozar2009: distribution, taxonomy, 95
- MillsSeGa2016: distribution, genetics, host, 260
- RossHaOk2012: phylogeny, taxonomy, 199