Celaenorrhinus plagiatus Berger 1976
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3033.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6C3D2156-6E4A-FFCA-E0FE-FBBCFA2437DA |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Celaenorrhinus plagiatus Berger 1976 |
status |
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Celaenorrhinus plagiatus Berger 1976 View in CoL ( Figures 1.1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 )
This species was described from Ghana (type locality), Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria, Cameroon, and Democratic Republic of Congo ( Zaïre) ( Berger 1976). Vuattoux (1999) reared five adults from Hypoestes forskaolii (= verticillaris ) ( Acanthaceae ).
I found it together with C. proxima maesseni in Côte d’Ivoire and reared both, but did not adequately distinguish or document the early stages, which are very similar. I reared C. plagiatus once from caterpillars collected in two-cut shelters on Brillantaisia lamium (MJWC 323 identified by I. Darbyshire, Kew, and MJWC 2010) growing in the shade in Forêt de Yapo, 4 and 10 Dec 1988 (88/203). I did not distinguish the caterpillar from that of C. proxima maesseni , except to note that the white dorsolateral line of the penultimate instar caterpillar ended on A 8 in an orange-red suffusion which extended onto segment A9, whereas the dorsolateral line of C. proxima maesseni simply ended at A8. The head capsule of the final instar measured 3.1 (2.8–3.4) x 2.9 (2.7–3.2) mm wide x high (n=4), and that of the penultimate instar 2.2 (2.15–2.2) x 2.1 (2.07–2.19) mm (n=3). A week after collection, caterpillars accepted Ruellia primuloides (the food plant of 88/208 below), but only one adult was successfully reared through. Three final instar caterpillars were preserved in ethanol.
A two-cut shelter, 14x 15 mm, collected on the same occasion on the same food plant (88/204) contained a dead final instar caterpillar with about 23 Apanteles (s.l.) cocoons just under 3 mm long loosely scattered around it. The dead caterpillar was preserved in ethanol. Five days later, 12 male adult wasps emerged.
Another collection, which was not successfully reared, was made on R. primuloides ( Figure 2.1 View FIGURE 2 ) (MJWC 324 identified by I. Darbyshire, Kew Herbarium, 2010), also in Forêt de Yapo on 4 Dec 1988 (88/208). A final instar caterpillar was found in a two-cut shelter, measuring 22x 20 mm, with a short bridge around a major vein. On 6 Dec, I noted that the caterpillar was 20 mm long; head very dark brown, shiny, rugose; body as 88/203 ( C. plagiatus ), and that it appeared to be full of Apanteles sp. larvae ( Figure 2.2 View FIGURE 2 ). Three days later, on 9 Dec, Apanteles sp. of 88/203 ( C. plagiatus ) from that of C. proxima maesseni , I provisionally treat this caterpillar (88/208) as C. plagiatus . A weak orange suffusion can be seen dorsolaterally on A8 and more strongly on the anal plate ( Figure 2.2 View FIGURE 2 ).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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