Cissococcus species
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2996.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FAA75F-FF82-FFFA-FF00-06BADCB5EA28 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Cissococcus species |
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Key for the separation of instars of Cissococcus species
1. Wings or wing buds present............................................................................. 2
- Wings or wing buds absent.............................................................................. 4
2. Wings present; body clearly divided into head, thorax and abdomen; head with 2 pairs of simple eyes; abdomen with glandular pouches and glandular pouch setae................................................................ adult male
- Wings absent, only represented by wing buds; division of body into head, thorax and abdomen not clear; head without simple pores; abdomen without glandular pouches or glandular pouch setae............................................. 3
3. Antennae long, extending posterior to mesocoxae; prothoracic legs long, extending anterior to head................. pupa
- Antennae short, barely reaching anterior spiracle; prothoracic legs short, barely reaching scape.................. prepupa
4. Each anal plate with a very long apical seta; with only about 20 marginal setae on each side, each seta bluntly spinose............................................................................................. first-instar nymph
- Each anal plate with only a short apical seta; margins with 30+ sharply spinose setae on each side..................... 5
5. Tubular ducts absent from both dorsum and venter; loculate pores present in a submarginal band; antennae 6 segmented... 6
- Tubular ducts present on both dorsum and venter; loculate pores absent from submargin; antennae 7 segmented.................................................................................................. second-instar male
6. Dorsum with enlarged, sunken cone-shaped secretory spines, membranous to lightly sclerotised, and in younger specimens of equal size to venter (latter expanded in mature female nymphs only)............................. second-instar female
- Dorsum without large, sunken cone-shaped secretory spines and represented by an oval sclerotised area much smaller than expanded venter (latter recognised by presence of legs and antenna)............................................ 7
7. Dorsum about half as long as total body length or less; ventral loculate pores relatively few, in sparse segmental bands; setae on lower venter sparse and short; dorsum with fewer than about 10 spinose setae on dorsal surface.......third-instar female
- Dorsum much less than half total body length; ventral loculate pores abundant throughout most of venter; setae on lower venter abundant and long; dorsum with 15 or more spinose setae on dorsal surface............................ adult female
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