Phyllotetranychus aegyptiacus Sayed, 1938
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.24349/acarologia/20184255 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AABAF96C-DA66-4BF7-BE62-9596C4FFE347 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C58795-753C-FF98-D3FE-FE37FAACA7A3 |
treatment provided by |
Marcus |
scientific name |
Phyllotetranychus aegyptiacus Sayed, 1938 |
status |
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Phyllotetranychus aegyptiacus Sayed, 1938 ( Figure 21 View Figure 21 )
Diagnosis (Female) — Body oval and dorsally covered with fan-shaped, veined setae, prodorsum with setae v2 very broad near middle and distally pointed ( Fig 21 View Figure 21 ). Differs from second species in this genus, P. romaine Pritchard & Baker , only in having setae v2 elongate-elliptical. Palp two-segmented.
Male — Dorsal setae also fan-shaped but clearly smaller than those of female, not covering dorsum. Dorsocentral setae all similar but very dissimilar in P. romaine .
Hosts and localities — In Israel this species was collected from Phoenix dactylifera L.
( Arecaceae ), Arava Valley ( Smith Meyer & Gerson, 1981). It was originally described from P.
dactylifera View in CoL from Egypt ( Sayed, 1938) and also reported from Iran ( Khanjani et al., 2013).
Symptoms — Sucks plant sap with chlorophyll from leaves resulting in infested areas turning yellowish. In heavy infestations the affected areas change to dirty whitish blotches which result from the aggregation of the mites with their whitish fan-like setae, and the leaves eventually turn dark brown and die (Zaher et al., 1969). In Israel, no damage has ever been reported in association with this species (Palevsky, unpublished, Blumberg, 2008).
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