Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T00:12:42.881Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Observations on Scale-insects (Coccidae)—IV

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

Robert Newstead
Affiliation:
The School of Tropical Medicine, the University, Liverpool.

Extract

Llaveia abrahami, sp. nov.

Female, adult. Ovate, strongly gibbose above and flattened beneath; segmentation both on the dorsum and venter distinct. Colour, in alcohol, buff-yellow; with a thin deposit of white secretion in the hollows between the segments; legs and antennae yellowish brown. It is highly probable that much of the secretion had disappeared in the alcohol in which the specimens were preserved. Antennae of eleven segments, 2nd and 11th longest; 3rd a little shorter than the latter, but much longer than the succeeding ones, which are submoniliform in shape; average length 0·8–0·9 mm. Legs relatively short; tarsi a little more than half the length of the tibiae; front pair shortest, measuring 0·85 mm.; posterior pair longer, measuring 1–1·1 mm.; hairs relatively long and slender; claws simple, though in one example two of these organs have a well-marked tooth-like projection dorsally, just above the curved tip. Derm both dorsally and ventrally rather thickly set with very short fine hairs; margin with a narrow band of long fine hairs, the longest of which measure 0·6–0·7 mm. Pores dorso-ventrally relatively very small, circular and with beaded rims; these are less numerous than the fine hairs; those at the margins are slightly larger, much more numerous, and many have clear triangular-shaped centres. Anal segment of abdomen with three large ovate rings, the central one being slightly the largest and measuring about 0·2 mm. in its longest axis. Length, after maceration in KOH, 8–9 mm.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1917

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

* Trans. R. Soc. S. Africa, v, p. 165 (1915).Google Scholar

* Trans. R. Soc. S. Africa, V, p. 167, pl. xxii, fig. 48.Google Scholar

* Bull. Ent. Res., ii, p. 100, fig. 13 (1911).Google Scholar

* Proc. Linn. Soc., N.S.W., xxxvi, 1911Google Scholar

* N.Z. Trans., XXV, p. 223 (1892).Google Scholar

Coccidae of Ceylon, p. 264 (1909).Google Scholar

* Bull. Soc. Zool. France, 1909, p. 68Google Scholar; Mem. Soc. Zool. France, xxii, p. 165 (1909).Google Scholar

* Jour. Econ. Biol., vi., p. 29, pl. i. (1911).Google Scholar