Cryptogonus ariasi (Mulsant)

POORANI, J., 2024, An illustrated guide to lady beetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) of the Indian Subcontinent. Part 3. Tribe Aspidimerini, Zootaxa 5431 (1), pp. 1-89 : 16-22

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5431.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4E009D84-E49A-4544-BAA3-B91E603FB0BC

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03887A7B-D706-FF9A-93CD-4593FD26FBAB

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cryptogonus ariasi (Mulsant)
status

 

Cryptogonus ariasi (Mulsant)

( Figs 9–13 View FIGURE 9 View FIGURE 10 View FIGURE 11 View FIGURE 12 View FIGURE 13 )

Aspidimerus ariasi Mulsant, 1853 a: 265 ; 1853b: 137; Crotch 1874: 202; Weise 1900: 427; Korschefsky 1931: 172; Gordon 1987: 25.

Cryptogonus ariasi : Kapur 1948: 102.— Poorani 2002: 344; Kovář 2007: 575.

Cryptogonus nepalensis Bielawski, 1972: 294 .— Pang et Mao, 1979: 69. New synonym.

Cryptogonus nepalensis bhutanensis Bielawski, 1979: 109 . New synonym.

Diagnosis. Length: 3.00– 3.20 mm; width: 2.50–2.70 mm. Form broad oval, dorsum moderately convex and densely pubescent. Ground colour yellow to orange; head yellow, pronotum yellow a black macula on posterior margin above scutellar shield that is often enlarged and occupying most of pronotum except anterolateral corners, lateral and anterior margins narrowly yellowish-reddish, elytra yellow with five black spots arranged in a 3-2 pattern in nominate form, first row of three spots a little above midline and the second row in the apical one-third of elytra ( Figs 9a–c View FIGURE 9 , 10a, c, d View FIGURE 10 ); elytra with a transverse black macula on basal margin and larger black spots, occasionally apical margin and suture of elytra also black in variants (described as C. nepalensis Bielawski and C. nepalensis bhutanensis Bielawski ). Ventral side mostly black, legs apically lighter, epipleura yellowish. Abdominal postcoxal line incomplete ( Fig. 9d View FIGURE 9 , 12a, b View FIGURE 12 ). Male genitalia in nominate form ( Fig. 9e–g View FIGURE 9 ) as illustrated. Female genitalia ( Fig. 12f View FIGURE 12 ) and spermatheca ( Fig. 12g View FIGURE 12 ) as illustrated.

Material examined. INDIA: Sikkim:Singhik, 5000 ft, 26.vii.24/Everest Exp. Brit. Mus. 1924-386/ Cryptogonus ariasi (Muls.) A.P. Kapur det. 1946 ( BMNH: 3); Gangtok, Cryptogonus ariasi (Muls.) , identified by R. G. Booth ( BMNH: 2); Meghalaya: Cherrapunji, 24.xii.1958, 2 ex. ( ZSIK); Shillong, 5.iv.1959, leg. A.P. Kapur, 1 ex. ( ZSIK); Shillong, 16.iii.1960, leg. T.G. Vazirani, 1ex. ( ZSIK).

Distribution. India: Northeastern region (Assam; Himachal Pradesh; Manipur; Meghalaya; Mizoram; Sikkim; Uttarakhand); Nepal; China; Myanmar. Distributed from Kumaon Hills in India to Burma ( Kapur 1963 a).

Prey / Associated habitat. Aphis gossypii on okra ( Singh & Singh 1991).

Notes. Cryptogonus ariasi has a wide distribution as mentioned by Kapur (1963 a) and specimens from Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and northeastern India were examined for this study. Cryptogonus nepalensis Bielawski, 1972 and C. nepalensis bhutanensis Bielawski, 1979 are undoubtedly synonymous with C. ariasi and differ from C. ariasi only in the extent of maculation, particularly in having an additional basal macula on elytra and generally larger pronotal and elytral maculae. In the nominate form of C. ariasi , basal margin of elytra is almost immaculate ( Fig. 10a View FIGURE 10 ) to narrowly black ( Fig. 9a View FIGURE 9 ) and the elytral spots are small. Cryptogonus nepalensis Bielawski (1972) was described from a single male and the male genitalia illustrations match those of C. ariasi . In C. nepalensis (see holotype male in Fig. 11a, b View FIGURE 11 ), there is a larger transverse macula on the basal margin of elytra and the elytral spots are much larger but positioned in the same way as in C. ariasi . In C. nepalensis bhutanensis (see holotype male in Fig. 11e, f View FIGURE 11 and also Fig. 13a View FIGURE 13 ) also, the apical margins and suture of elytra are narrowly black in addition to the basal black elytral macula and the elytral spots are noticeably larger. The male genitalia of a small series of specimens with progressively larger maculae as in C. nepalensis / C. nepalensis bhutanensis were also found to be identical with C. ariasi with only the penis capsule showing some degree of variation that can only be intraspecific ( Figs 9e–g View FIGURE 9 , 12c–e View FIGURE 12 , 13c–f View FIGURE 13 ). The male genitalia of C. nepalensis were also compared with the material studied and identified by A. P. Kapur as C. ariasi in his revision of Aspidimerini and confirmed as conspecific (BMNH, examined). Surprisingly, C. ariasi was not even mentioned by Bielawski (1972) in his diagnostic account of C. nepalensis . He compared it with Cryptogonus blandus Mader, 1954 (treated as a synonym of Aspidimerus ruficrus Gorham by Huo et al. 2013). However, in another later publication ( Bielawski, 1979), he noted that C. nepalensis bhutanensis “superficially resembles” C. ariasi . Based on the available evidence, C. nepalensis and C. nepalensis bhutanensis are reduced to junior synonyms of C. ariasi (new synonyms).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Coccinellidae

Genus

Cryptogonus

Loc

Cryptogonus ariasi (Mulsant)

POORANI, J. 2024
2024
Loc

Cryptogonus nepalensis bhutanensis

Bielawski, R. 1979: 109
1979
Loc

Cryptogonus nepalensis

Pang, X. F. & Mao, J. L. 1979: 69
Bielawski, R. 1972: 294
1972
Loc

Cryptogonus ariasi

Kovar, I. 2007: 575
Poorani, J. 2002: 344
Kapur, A. P. 1948: 102
1948
Loc

Aspidimerus ariasi

Gordon, R. D. 1987: 25
Korschefsky, R. 1931: 172
Weise, J. 1900: 427
Crotch, G. R. 1874: 202
1874
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