SYSTEMATIC TREATMENT OF APHID GENERA
(in alphabetical order) M
Two or (probably) more palaearctic species
associated with Rhamnus and Polygonum, and probably with at least
a partial host alternation between these two plant genera. The genus is well-defined, being
characterised by a very long antennal terminal process, spiracles of
abdominal segments 1 and 2 well separated, and the cauda reduced to such an
extent that it is almost indiscernible. Apterae
have secondary rhinaria on ANT III, and alatae have them on III-IV (-V). The antennal
tubercles are smooth and divergent, and the siphunculi are tapering and
rather short. The species-level taxonomy is
difficult and in need of further work. Macchiatiella
itadori (Shinji) Plate 11g Apterae are yellow, brownish yellow or
green with shiny black dorsal abdominal patch and black siphunculi; BL
1.7-2.2 mm. They are found on Polygonum
and related genera (Aconogonon,
Fallopia, Fagopyrum, Reynoutria).
in Japan, Korea and east Siberia. Populations thought to be the primary host
generations of the same species occur on Rhamnus
spp. (japonica, purshiana) in Japan and Korea
(Miyazaki 1971). Apterae on Rhamnus
are shining yellow-brown or yellow-green with a brown head, an extensive
black dorsal abdominal patch, banded antennae and legs, and black siphunculi
(for illustration see Moritsu 1983); BL 1.8-2.1 mm. Large colonies are formed on the leaves,
young shoots and woody stems, causing leaf-curl (Hori 1927, as Acaudus rhamni). However,
host transfers have not been made and the life cycle is uncertain, being
based on synonymy with Hori’s species, which may not be correct, because Hori
(1927) stated that his aphid lived all year on Rhamnus and produced apterous as well as alate males. Alatae
produced on Rh. japonica were
shining green according to Hori (1927), whereas those produced on Rh. purshiana were yellow (Miyazaki
1971), so possibly two or more species are involved. Oviparae and males have
been collected or Rh. japonica in
September-October (Hori 1927, and BMNH collection). 2n=12. Macchiatiella
rhamni (Boyer de Fonscolombe) Apterae on Rhamnus are yellow-brown or yellow-green, and have antennae
ringed with black, pale legs with black tarsi, pale siphunculi and variably
developed black markings on abdominal tergites 3-5, which are sometimes
completely absent; BL 1.9-2.3 mm.
Populations on Rhamnus occur
in southern France, Italy, Portugal, Spain, and east to Turkey (BMNH collection). Remaudičre (1959) found a population on Phillyrea latifolia (Oleaceae), in the
south of France resembling those on Rhamnus
but with shorter and thicker appendages. As in M. itadori, there are
uncertainties about the life cycle. Anholocyclic populations occur
on Rh. alaternus in the
Mediterranean area (Barbagallo & Stroyan 1982). Contrary
to Blackman & Eastop (1994), there appear to be no authentic western
European records of this species from Polygonum.
Host
alternation to Polygonum is however
reported from Ukraine (Chumak 2004), and
a
form regarded as a subspecies, M. rhamni ssp. tarani, is believed to alternate between Rhamnus spp. and Polygonum in Central Asia (Nevsky 1929a, as Neanuraphis; Kadyrbekov 2009b). Aphids
assigned to M. rhamni s. lat. occur
on the undersides of leaves of Polygonum
spp. in Central Asia, Mongolia and Korea. Specimens in BMNH collection from Polygonum in Mongolia (leg. H.
Szelegiewicz) and Korea (leg. W.H. Paik) have more extensive dark
pigmentation and longer cephalic hairs. Those from Mongolia have spinal and
marginal abdominal tubercles, but less frequently than in European specimens,
and those from Korea are without tubercles (as in M. itadori). M. rhamni is
also recorded from Siberia on Bassia (=
Echinopsilon) sedoides (Ivanoskaya 1977, as Neanuraphis
rhamni), but the Siberian aphid has longer siphunculi. It seems likely
that more than one species is involved.
Two
oriental species on Lauraceae, resembling Phyllaphis
and Diphyllaphis but differing in
the form of the empodial hairs and structure of the last rostral segment.
Until recently there was thought to be only a single species in the genus,
but Quednau (2010) has distinguished the specimens from Japan described as machili by Takahashi (1960c) as a
second species. Machilaphis
machili (Takahashi)
Apterae are elongate oval or pear-shaped , pale green or yellowish; BL
1.6-2.0 mm. On undersides of leaves of
Lauraceae (Machilus, Neolitsea, Phoebe) and there is also a record from Cinnamomum camphora (as Shivaphis
cinnamomophila Zhang). Recorded
from Japan, Thailand, China, Taiwan and India (Assam, Meghalaya). According to A.K. Ghosh et al. (1971d), a waxy secretion is
produced on the host plant. Biology and
life cycle have not been studied, and sexual morphs are unknown. Machilaphis
pseudomachili Quednau Colour of apterae in life unknown; BL
1.3-1.9 mm. On ?Machilaphis sp.
(probably thunbergii) and Cinnamomum japonicum in Japan (Takahashi 1960c, as M. machili; Quednau 2010). A series of
specimens (including the holotype and paratypes) was also purportedly
collected from Quercus glauca, but
this is an unlikely host and may have been an error of identification or
labelling. For further information see Quednau (2010).
Two
east Asian species related to Macromyzus
but with shorter hairs and unsclerotised dorsum, one of which is a fern
feeder like Macromyzus, but the
other is described from Celtis, a
host unlikely enough to require additional confirmation. Macromyzella
celticola Sorin & Arakawa The appearance of apterae in life is
unknown; BL c.1.8 mm. The host is recorded as Celtis jessoensis. In Japan (Honshu). Alatae viviparae and alate
males possibly belonging to this species but collected on various other
plants (presumably vagrant individuals) were described (as Macromyzella sp.) in the same paper
(Sorin & Arakawa 2005). Macromyzella
polypodicola (Takahashi) Apterae are yellow, orange or cream-coloured,
with black siphunculi and cauda; BL c.2 mm. On ferns (Asplenium, Cheilanthes,
Christella, Cyclosorus, Diplazium, Polystichum) in east and south-east
Asia (Japan, Okinawa, Korea, Thailand, China, Taiwan, Philippines, Malaysia,
Indonesia, New Britain). Takahashi (1963a), as Macromyzus) provided a redescription.
Four medium-large Asian
fern-feeding species with spiculose head, siphunculi with subapical reticulation,
and a rugose dorsal cuticle with raised dark hair-bearing sclerites. The
apparent relationship with Tuberoaphis would
be substantiated if the host alternation reported for M. woodwardiae, with a sexual phase and a remarkably modified
fundatrix on Hydrangea (Miyazaki
1972), could be experimentally
confirmed. The genus was reviewed by Su & Qiao (2010a). Macromyzus (Anthracosiphoniella) maculatus (A.N.
Basu) Apterae are yellowish green
with dark brown dorsal markings; BL c.2.4-2.6 mm. On undersides of fronds of
various ferns (Asplenium, Athyrium, Deparia, Diplazium, Dryopteris, Eriosorus, Parathelypteris, Phegopteris, Pronephrium) in northern
India and China (Su & Qiao 2010a, Su et
al. 2014). Apparently anholocyclic (original description, and A.K. Ghosh
1974a). Macromyzus
manoji Raha & Raychaudhuri Apterae are presumably brown with
pale-tipped siphunculi: BL c. 2.4 mm. On ferns (Asplenium, Cheilanthes),
and also recorded from “Disclesrea
alata”, presumably an error for Dioscorea
alata, although this this is unlikely to be a true host. In India (West
Bengal). Records of M. woodwardiae in
West Bengal may refer to this species, including one of oviparae on an
unidentified plant in January (A.K. Ghosh 1974a, and see original
description). Macromyzus
spinosus Su & Qiao Apterae are elongate oval, yellow-brown;
BL 1.8-2.0 mm. On undersides of young leaves of Plagiogyria japonica in Hunan province, China (Su & Qiao
2010a). Macromyzus
woodwardiae (Takahashi) Plate 22b (Fig.32b, Fig.43c) Apterae on ferns are brown with black
siphunculi, legs with black distal parts to femora and yellowish tibiae; BL
2.2-2.8 mm. In Japan, Taiwan, China, Korea, Nepal and India. On undersides of
fronds and new growth of ferns in many genera. Anholocyclic on ferns in most
places, but in Japan it is apparently also partially heteroecious holocyclic,
orange-yellow fundatrices and alate spring migrants having been described
from Hydrangea (Miyazaki 1972a).
Moritsu (1983) records this species from five Hydrangea spp., and also from Deutzia
gracilis (Hydrangeaceae) and Weigela
coraeensis (Caprifoliaceae); an odd concordance of primary hosts with Rhopalosiphoninus deutzifoliae.
Fundatrices have long dorsal processes like those of Tuberoaphis on Hydrangea,
and the two genera are evidently closely related, so the unknown secondary
hosts of Tuberoaphis may be ferns. However the life cycle of M. woodwardiae still needs
experimental confirmation with host
transfers. Records of M. woodwardiae from
West Bengal are referable to M. manoji (Raha
& Raychaudhuri 1978). 2n=12.
A distinctive genus of about six Asian species with greatly enlarged fore femora and numerous dorsal tubercular processes bearing hairs and wax glands. Life cycles are unknown, and host relationships are unclear; most species are found on Potentilla, but three species have Artemisia and Carex also recorded as hosts (although the morphology is not that expected of a Carex-feeding aphid). Ivanoskaya (1981) provided a key to species then known, and (1982) discussed relationships within the genus. W. Zhang et al. (1995d), Qiao & Zhang (2003d) and D. Zhang & Qiao (2008a) reviewed the genus in China. Quednau (2010) reviewed and keyed the species, making several synonymies, and illustrated all available morphs. Macropodaphis
alexandri Ivanoskaya-Shubina (= M.
tsherepanovi Ivanoskaya) Apterae
are pale green or yellowish green, BL 1.5-2.5 mm. Alatae are unknown. On Potentilla spp. (chrysantha, supina),
and also recorded from Artemisia
frigida and Carex duriuscula
(an unlikely host?) in Russia (west Siberia, Gorno-Altaisk). Closely related
to M. paradoxa, but removed from
synonymy with that species by Quednau (2010). Macropodaphis
dzhungarica Kadyrbekov Apterae are glaucous lilac-colured, with
mainly dark appendages; BL c. 1.5-1.7 mm. Alatae are unknown. On Potentilla (=Pentaphylloides) parviflora
in Kazakhstan, and redescribed from the Tibetan Plateau (D. Zhang & Qiao
2008a). Closely related to M.
primigenius. Macropodaphis
paradoxa Zachvatkin and Aizenberg (= M.
kuraijensis Ivanoskaya) Plate 3i (Fig.12c) Apterae are pale green or yellowish green,
appendages mainly pale with dark apices; BL 1.5-2.0 mm. One alata has
secondary rhinaria distributed III 26, IV 20, V 3. Described from Carex in east Siberia, but
subsequently also recorded by Ivanoskaya (1965) in west Siberia from Artemisia frigida (as M. kuraijensis), and this is more
likely to be the true host. M. damrosei
Ivanoskaya, described from a single trapped alata, is a possible synonym
(Quednau 2010). Macropodaphis
primigenius Ivanoskaya (= M.
bamensis Ivanoskaya, = M.
dasiphorae Ivanoskaya) Apterae
are pale green or glaucous lilac, with dark head, antennae, femora,
siphunculi and cauda; BL 1.6-3.8 mm. Apterae have 0-5(-7) secondary rhinaria
on ANT III, and one alata has them distributed III 19, IV 2, V 0. On Potentilla fruticosa in Siberia and
Kazakhstan, and on ?Carex sp. in
Mongolia (BMNH collection, leg. H. Szelegiewicz). Differences in size and
colour between populations are considered to be attributable to intraspecific
variation (Quednau 2010). An ovipara collected in west Siberia in late August
on Potentilla sp. is illustrated by
Quednau (2010). Macropodaphis
rechingeri Remaudičre
& Davatchi (= M. kulundensis Ivanoskaya, = M. ivanoskajae Kadyrbekov) (Fig.12a,b) Apterae are pale green (original
description and Kadyrbekov 1991, as M.
ivanoskajae) or yellowish grey (Ivanoskaya 1963, as M. kulundensis), with dorsal tubercles very evident; BL 1.4-2.1
mm. An alata has secondary rhinaria distributed III 22, IV 10, V 0. On
undersides of leaves of Artemisia
austriaca var. orientalis in
Iran, moving very quickly when disturbed (original description). However,
Kadyrbekov (2012a) recorded it on Potentilla
bifurca in Kazakhstan. M. kulundensis,
collected on Salvia stepposa (= dumetorum) in Siberia, is regarded as a synonym, as also is M. ivanoskajae, found dispersed on
upper and lower sides of leaves of Potentilla sp. in Kazakhstan (Quednau
2010). Macropodaphis
tubituberculata Zhang &
Zhang Apterae are green, with whitish
dorsal tubercles evident; BL c.2.2 mm.
Alatae are unknown. On Carduus
crispus in China.
About 115 palaearctic and 5
nearctic species, mostly having siphunculi and cauda similar in length, with
siphunculi reticulated over distal half.
Most species feed on Anthemideae and have a stiletto-shaped R
IV+V. At least half the species feed
on Artemisia and/or the closely-
related Seriphidium, and 6-8 species are known from each
of Achillea, Aster, Helichrysum, Centaurea, and other Cynareae, with
fewer from Chrysanthemum and other
Anthemidae. The numerous species colonising Artemisia with little evidence of host specificity, and often without
apparent biological differences, is difficult to understand and worthy of
closer study. Host alternation does not
occur. Although found throughout the
Northern Hemisphere the genus has a distinctly continental distribution, with
about 30% described from Central Asia, Siberia, Mongolia and China. Accounts are available for western Europe
(Hille Ris Lambers 1938), Fennoscandia and Denmark (Heie 1995), UK and
Ireland (Blackman 2010), Switzerland (Lampel & Meier 2007), European
Russia (Shaposhnikov 1964), Siberia (Ivanovskaya 1977), India (R.C. Basu
& Raychaudhuri 1976b), Mongolia (Holman & Szelegiewicz 1974b, 1978),
Korea (Szelegiewicz 1980, Lee et al.
2002c, Holman et al. 2006a, b),
China (Tao 1963), east Siberia (Pashchenko 1998a-b, 1999a-b), Japan (Miyazaki
1971) and North America (Robinson 1987, Jensen et al. 2020)). Kadyrbekov (2018b) provided a key to apterae of
the subgenus Asterobium, and
Kadyrbekov (2019) provided a key to green palaearctic species of Macrosiphoniella s. str. without dark
dorsal abdominal sclerites. Macrosiphoniella
abrotani (Walker) Apterae are greyish green or dull grass
green, wax-dusted, with a dark medial stripe with mainly pale legs and
antennae, and siphunculi brownish with darker apices; BL 2.4-3.1 mm. Usually found on young stems of Artemisia abrotanum; also recorded
from some other Artemisia and Seriphidium spp. and from Tripleurospermum (=Matricaria) inodora, and from two Tanacetum
spp., with a single record from Achillea
millefolium. In Europe, western Siberia, the Middle East, south-west and
Central Asia (Kadyrbekov 2009a, 2017a), north Africa, and introduced to South
Africa, Australia, north-eastern USA and Canada. A form corresponding
morphologically to southern European populations has been introduced into Argentina
(BMNH collection, leg. J. Ortego, and Ortego et al. 2006). Populations
in east Asia have been distinguished as subspecies; A. abrotani ssp. chosoni Szelegiewicz on Artemisia spp. in Korea and China (Holman et al. 2006b, Lee et al. 2002c, Szelegiewicz 1980, Zhang et al. 1987), also recorded from Tanacetum boreale in east Siberia (Pashchenko 1998a), and A.
abrotani ssp. sainshandi
Szelegiewicz on A. sieversiana in
Mongolia (Holman & Szelegiewicz 1978), also recorded from Altai, Russia (Kadyrbekov
2014g) and Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2017a). Two species described from A. scoparia in north-west China (Zhang
et al. 1999), M. hofuchui and M. tsizhongi, are also
members of this group and are not
clearly distinct from abrotani (but
the illustration of a siphunculus ascribed to M. hofuchui is of a member of the M. antennata group). Oviparae
and alate males appear on A. abrotanum in
Europe in September-October. Macrosiphoniella absinthii (L.) Apterae are generally reddish brown,
partly wax-powdered, with black head, antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda,
and a black spot in the centre of the abdomen (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.7-2.5 mm.
Commmonly on upper parts of stems of Artemisia
absinthium in northern, central and eastern Europe, western Siberia,
Iran, Central Asia; also in north Africa and the Mediterranean area, where it
occurs on other Artemisia and Seriphidium spp. There are also
records from Dendranthema zawadzkii (in
Poland; Heie 1995), Leucanthemum
vulgare (in the Netherlands; Piron 2017), and Tanacetum praeteritum.
Introduced to USA and Canada, and to South America (Argentina: Ortego et al. 2006; Chile: Nieto Nafría et al. 2018). Apterous
males and oviparae occur in October in England (Blackman 2010). However,
alate males have been recorded from Latvia (Opmanis 1928). 2n=12.
Macrosiphoniella
achlys Zhang, Chen, Zhong &
Li Apterae are shining black; BL c.2
mm. On stems of Artemisia scoparia in
Xinjiang-Uygur region of China (Zhang 1999). A member of the atra group. Macrosiphoniella
aetnensis Barbagallo (Fig. 31m) Apterae are green, covered with greyish wax
powder except for a bare central dorsal abdominal area; BL 1.7-2.2 mm. On Helichrysum italicum, living on stems
and undersides of leaves, in Italy. Apparently the production of sexual
morphs occurs late in the season; viviparae were present in November, and an
ovipara was collected in December (Barbagallo 1970). Macrosiphoniella
aizhanae Kadyrbekov Apterae are pale green or pale pink with
dark brown tibiae and siphunculi; BL 2.3-2.9 mm. On flower stems of Pseudolinosyris grimii on rocky
mountain slopes in southern Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2019a). Macrosiphoniella
ajaniae Kadyrbekov Apterae are shining black, BL 1.3-1.5 mm.
In small colonies on flowerheads of Ajania
fastigiata in south-east Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 1999a). Probably a member
of the atra group. Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) aktaschica Nevsky
1929 Apterae are green, dusted with
wax, with brownish antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda (Kadyrbekov 2018b);
BL 2.2-2.6 mm. It was originally described from Aster in Central Asia as a subspecies of M. asteris, and subsequently recorded (as M. aktashica)
from Aster (= Pseudolinosyris) grimmii
and Heteropappus altaicus
respectively by Kadybekov (2005b) and Kadyrbekov & Aoitzhanova (2005),
as well as from two species of Erigeron
(Kadyrbekov 2014d). Oviparae and alate males of M. (A.) aktaschica, collected on Aster in October in south-east Kazakhstan, were described by
Kadyrbekov (2018b), who also provided a redescription of the aptera. [Note that M. aktashica Nevsky 1928 is a quite different species, related to
M. tapuskae.] Macrosiphoniella
aktashica (Nevsky 1928) Apterae are very pale, whitish to pale
green, with siphunculi dark distally, antennae somewhat pigmented and tibial
apices and tarsi dark; BL 2.0-3.1 mm. On undersides of leaves of Tanacetum sp(p). in Central Asia, and
also now recorded from various Achillea
spp. in Iran and Turkey, Remaudičre et
al. (2006) providing morphometric data and recording oviparae and
apterous males from those countries. A longer-haired form on T. pseudoachillea and Achillea sp. was described as a
subspecies, M. aktashica ssp. hirsuta (Daniyarova), but this is synonymised with the nominate
species by Kadyrbekov (2019), who also gives the very similar M. tapuskae subspecies status. [Note: M. (Asterobium) aktaschica Nevsky 1929 from Aster is another species; see under M. asteris.] Macrosiphoniella
alatavica (Nevsky) Apterae are rather elongate-bodied, pale
green with antennae and upper halves of siphunculi dusky; BL 2.0-2.8 mm. On
flower stalks of Artemisia dracunculus
in Central Asia. Records from other Artemisia
species should be treated circumspectly as the name has been wrongly
applied. M. alatavica has been
placed as a member of the nitida group
(e.g. Holman & Szelegiewicz 1978), close to M. dracunculi, but
this does not fit well with the original description. M. lambersi (q.v.) has been erroneously placed as a synonym. M. tadshikana may be closely related. Macrosiphoniella
albiartemisiae Zhang, Chen,
Zhong & Li Apterae are blackish
brown; BL c.1.7 mm. On Artemisia
stelleriana in Qinghai Province, China (Zhang 1999). Macrosiphoniella
altaica Ivanoskaya (= M.
longirostrata Holman &
Szelegiewicz; see Kadyrbekov 2019a)
Apterae are pale green with dark antennae, legs, siphunculi (except
pale basally) and cauda; BL 1.6-2.1 mm. On upper parts of stems of Artemisia frigida in Siberia.
Kadyrbekov (2011c) assigned aphids on A.
austriaca in Kazakhstan to this species, and also reported its occurrence
in Mongolia (Kadyrbekov 2017a). Probably a member of the nitida group. [The specimens recorded as M. longirostrata from A.
stellariana in Sakhalin by Pashchenko (1988a) were presumably M. sachalinensis (q.v.). See also
comment under M szalaymarzsoi.] Macrosiphoniella
(Phalangomyzus) antennata Holman &
Szelegiewicz (Fig.13h) Apterae are elongate spindle-shaped,
bluish or pinkish pruinose with brown head and a dark spot between
siphunculi, and with appendages (including siphunculi and cauda) mainly
blackish brown; BL 2.7-4.2 mm. On Artemisia spp., living singly or in
small groups on the lower sides of leaves. In Mongolia, Russia (Altai, east
Siberia) Kazakhstan and Korea, and also now recorded from California, USA
(Skvarla et al. 2017). M. antennata ssp. takahashii is placed as a synonym by Lee et al. (2002c). M.
annulata Zhang, described from China on Artemisia capillaris, resembles antennata but is green in life, and mounted specimens have pale
middle sections to the tibiae. A
second sample of antennata-group
aphids from China (BMNH collection, VFE 18,135), from Artemisia ?annua, also
has pale middle sections to the tibiae, but the siphunculi are shorter, like antennata s. str. from Mongolia. Until
this variation in pigmentation and siphuncular length has been studied
further it seems best to apply the name antennata
to all members of this group.
2n=12 (for VFE 18,135). Macrosiphoniella
(Papillomyzus) arctica Pashcshenko Apterae are greenish grey, sometimes with
pinkish tinge, wax-dusted; BL c.2.5 mm. In small dense colonies on upper
parts of Artemisia arctica in
north-east Siberia (Pashchenko 1999a). Other morphs unknown. Macrosiphoniella
arenariae Bozhko Apterae are green with appendages mainly
dark and with dark dorsal abdominal markings, especially on segments 2-4; BL
c. 2 mm. On stems of Artemisia arenaria (= A. campestris ssp. inodora) in Ukraine, and later
recorded from other Artemisia spp.
(Bozhko 1976), and in Russia (north Caucasus) and Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov
2012a). It is possibly a member of the
atra group, although these are
usually black in life. Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) argynica Kadyrbekov Apterae are shining dark brown with
blackish siphunculi and cauda, legs also blackish aprat from bases of femora
and middle parts of tibiae; BL 1.8-2.3 mm. On flowers and stems of Galatella sedifolia ssp. biflora on rocky mountain slopes in
central Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2018b). Macrosiphoniella
artemisiae (Boyer de
Fonscolombe) (Fig.13m) Apterae are greyish green, wax powdered,
with appendages mainly black (see
influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 2.3-3.6 mm. A yellow mutant form was found in
England (Blackman 2006). Common on upper parts of Artemisia vulgaris, especially between inflorescences, and frequently forming large colonies. Several
other species of Artemisia are also
recorded as hosts, and there are also records from Leucanthemum vulgare and Tanacetum
parthenium. Throughout Europe, eastward across Siberia, south-west and
Central Asia, Pakistan, Mongolia and China, and introduced to North America and
Argentina (Ortego et al. 2004).
Populations on Artemisia arborescens in
Sicily were described as a subspecies, M. artemisiae ssp. meridionalis Barbagallo,
distinguished by smaller size, shorter siphunculi and fewer secondary
rhinaria and caudal hairs. Similar aphids are also found in the Canary
Islands. The east Asian M. yomogifoliae
is closely related and has been regarded as a subspecies. M.
sibirica Ivanoskaya, on Artemisia
spp. in Siberia, cannot be differentiated from M. artemisiae using its published description, and M.
tanacetaria ssp. divia described
from Tanacetum and Ambrosia in east Siberia
(Pashchenko1999a), may also be a synonym. Oviparae and alate males appear in
September-October in western Europe.
2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) asteris (Walker) Apterae are brownish green with black
dorsal spots, body somewhat wax-powdered, with appendages mainly dark (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 2.3-3.2 mm. On Aster tripolium, in small colonies on upper parts of stems and in
the inflorescences; also recorded
from Galatella sedifolia (in Spain). Throughout Europe, and also recorded from
Korea (Lee et al., 2002c). Possibly it also occurs in Central Asia,
if M.
erigeronis ssp. villosae
Smailova is a synonym. Oviparae and apterous males occur in early October (northern Italy; Hille Ris Lambers
1938). Macrosiphoniella
atra (Ferrari) Apterae are shiny black with mainly black
appendages; BL c.1.8-2.1 mm. In shoot tips and inflorescences of Artemisia
alba (= camphorata) in Italy
(Roberti 1958), and also found on other Artemisia
spp. and in other parts of
Europe (France, Netherlands, Hungary, former Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Greece),
and in west Siberia and Kazakhstan.
Holman & Szelegiewicz (1978) described a subspecies, M.
atra ssp. latysiphon, from Mongolia, and this form is
reported from Artemisia spp. in
Korea (Lee et al. 2002c, Holman et al. 2006b), Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2009a,
2017a) and the Altai (Kadyrbekov 2014g), and also from east Siberia on Tanacetum boreale (Pashchenko 1988a).
Another subspecies, M. atra ssp. turanica, was described from
Tajikistan (Narzikulov & Umarov 1969, as M. affinis ssp. turanica),
and was given full species status by Remaudičre & Remaudičre (1997, as M. affinis), but this seems to be
based only on size-related differences. Holman & Szelegiewicz (1978)
discussed morphological variation in
the atra group, which
includes M. atrata Umarov
(on Artemisia sp. in Tajikistan),
and M. nigropilosa Nevsky
(described from Artemisia persica
in Kazakhstan, but subsequently collected frequently on A. santolinifolia, and also recorded from other Artemisia spp., and from Thymus serphyllum in Central Asia; see
Narzikulov & Umarov 1969 and Kadyrbekov 2017a). Umarov (1964) described Central Asian populations of M. nigropilosa differing from Nevsky’s as a subspecies, M. nigropilosa ssp. pamirica.
A member of the atra group is also
present in north-west India (Bindra & Sekhon 1969, as hikosanensis). The atra group may also include M.
achlys, M. ajaniae, M. albiartemisiae, M. brevisiphona, M. himalayana and M. santolinifoliae. Kadyrbekov (1999a) provided a key to
distinguish some of these species then described. Macrosiphoniella
austriacae Bozhko Apterae are pale brown (with darker
transverse bars on dorsal abdomen), densely covered in white wax powder; BL
c. 1.8-1.8 mm. On stems of Artemisia spp.,
specially A. austriaca, in Ukraine, Moldova, south-east
Russia and western Siberia, and also recorded from Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov
2004b). Close to M. teriolana. Macrosiphoniella
borealis Pashchenko Apterae are green with mainly pale brown
appendages; BL c.2.6 mm. On flower
stems of Artemisia arctica, A. tanacetifolia and (one sample) Tanacetum boreale, usually forming
small dense colonies, in north-east Siberia (Pashchenko 1998a), and also recorded from Artemisia rupestris in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2009b). Oviparae and
an apterous male were collected in Siberia in August. Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) bozhkoae Remaudičre Apterae are dark green, wax-dusted; BL c.
2.5 mm. On Linosyris (= Galatella) villosa in Ukraine (Bozhko 1976, as M. ucrainica), and also recorded from south-east Russia and west
Kazakhstan. Macrosiphoniella
brevisiphona Zhang Appearance in life is unknown, probably
dark as it appears to be a member of the atra
group; BL c. 2.4 mm. On Artemisia sp.
in Tibet. A paratype specimen has been
examined, and seems close to M. atra ssp.
latysiphon. Macrosiphoniella
capillaricola Holman, Lee
& Havelka Apterae are dark brown
to shiny black; BL 2.0-2.8 mm. Immatures are reddish brown. On stems of Artemisia in South Korea, clearly
preferring A. capillaris (Holman et al.
2006b). Macrosiphoniella
caucasica (Wojciechowski) Apterae are matt brownish black; BL
1.7-1.9 mm. On flowers and fruits of Pyrethrum
sp. in Russia (Caucasus). Macrosiphoniella
cayratiae Tseng & Tao Colour in life is unknown; BL of aptera
c.2.4 mm. On Cayratia japonica in
China. Macrosiphoniella cegmidi Szelegiewicz Apterae are bright greenish, with
siphunculi dark at apices; c. BL 1.7-2.0 mm. On Artemisia sp. in Mongolia. (See comment under M. szalaymarzsoi.)
Macrosiphoniella
(Sinosiphoniella) chaetosiphon Takahashi
& Moritsu (Fig.13e) Apterae are dark red with black siphunculi
and cauda, BL 2.0-2.5 mm. On Artemisia spp.
in Japan and Korea. Oviparae were
found on A. princeps in October in
South Korea (Holman et al. 2006a).
Generic placement was discussed by Holman & Szelegiewicz (1979). Macrosiphoniella
chamaemelifoliae Remaudičre
& Leclant (Fig.13o) Apterae are pale green, wax dusted, with
head, antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda black; BL 1.6-2.6 mm. In colonies,
often very dense, on shoots of Artemisia chamaemelifolia at altitudes
of 1,600-2,000m in the French Alps. It is also reported to occur in Iran
(Rezwani 2010). Oviparae and both apterous and alate males appear in France
from August-October, fundatrices in
late June. Aphidius absinthii and Ephedrus niger are recorded as
parasitoids of this species (original description). Macrosiphoniella
cinerascens Hille Ris
Lambers Apterae are bright
sea-green, with dorsal pattern of white powder; BL 2.1-2.6 mm. On lower
leaves of Achillea californica (= millefolium), turning their tips
brown. In western USA (California, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, Washington). Macrosiphoniella
(Papillomyzus) confusa Holman, Lee
& Havelka Colour in life is
unknown; BL 2.3-2.9 mm. On Tanacetum
boreale in Korea (Holman et al.
2006a). Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) crepidis Holman &
Szelegiewicz Apterae are yellowish green,
covered with a greyish wax powder, with dark appendages; BL 1.8-2.5 mm. On Crepis spp. in Mongolia. Other morphs have not been described. Macrosiphoniella
cymbariae Bozhko Apterae are dark yellow-brown; BL c.2.2
mm. On Cymbaria borysthenica in Ukraine. Macrosiphonella
(Asterobium) davazhamci Holman &
Szelegiewicz Apterae are matt green,
dusted ventrally with greyish wax powder; BL 1.9-2.6 mm. On Aster hispidus in Mongolia, on Aster canescens (Nees) Fisjun (= Kalimeris altaica) in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov
2012a) and Iran (see below), and on Aster
sp. in China, near Beijing (BMNH collection, leg. V.F. Eastop). Immature
oviparae and alate males were found in September (original description), and
the sexuales have now been described (including detailed SEM studies) from
material collected on K. altaica by
G. Remaudičre in Iran in November (Kanturski & Barjadze 2018). Macrosiphoniella
dimidiata Börner (Fig.13j) Apterae are are brown or greenish, wax
powdered, with black head, siphunculi and cauda, and mainly black (except at
bases) antennae and legs; BL 1.8-2.7 mm. On upper parts of shoots of Artemisia spp. (usually campestris) throughout most of
continental Europe, western Siberia, south-west and Central Asia
(Kazakhstan). In Israel it occurs on A.
monosperma (BMNH collection). M. lena Pashchenko, described from
Artemisia commutata (= pubescens) in east Siberia (Pashchenko
1998a), is possibly this species, and M.
kirgisica Umarov in Central Asia also seems closely related. [There is an
argument for using the earlier name fasciata
del Guercio for this species (Leclant 1968b), but the application of this
name is confused and we therefore here retain the more generally accepted
name dimidiata.] Oviparae and apterous males occur in
October in Finland (Heikinheimo 1997). 2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
dracunculi (Umarov) Apterae are green with dark siphunculi,
BL c. 2.6-2.8 mm, on stems of Artemisia
dracunculus in Kyrgyzstan. Probably
close to M. nitida, but with
shorter antennal terminal process and longer siphunculi (Holman &
Szelegiewicz 1978). Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) elegans Pashchenko Apterae are shining black; BL c. 2.9 mm.
On shoot apices and flower buds of Galatella
dahurica in east Siberia (Pashchenko 1999a). Macrosiphoniella
(Sinosiphoniella) elenae Pashchenko Apterae are dark brown; BL c. 1.9 mm.
Found in small sparse colonies on stems of Artemisia stolonifera, visited by ants (the short siphunculi and
cauda are clearly adaptations for ant attendance). In east Siberia
(Pashchenko 1999b). Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) erigeronis Nevsky Apterae are shining brown, with black
siphunculi and cauda; BL 1.7-2.5 mm. Forming dense colonies on flower stalks
of Erigeron acer in west and
central Asia (Georgia, Azerbaijan, western Siberia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan). Macrosiphoniella
erythraea Zhang
& Qiao Apterae are red in life.
Described from two apterae and immatures on Artemisia sp. in Fujian province, China (Qiao & Zhang 1999c, 1999d). It is said to be near M. myohyangsani, except for its colour
in life and paler, more hairy cauda. Macrosiphoniella
femorata Bozhko Apterae are dark green; BL c.1.9 mm. On Hieracium umbellatum in Ukraine. This
species could not be included in the key to aphids on Hieracium on the basis of the published description. Macrosiphoniella
formosartemisiae Takahashi Apterae are shiny black with mainly
blackish brown appendages, BL c. 1.8-2.2 mm. On stems of Artemisia spp. in Japan, China, Korea, Taiwan, east Siberia,
Mongolia and India. Sexuales do not appear to have been described; the
species is anholocyclic in Taiwan (Takahashi 1923). Holman & Szelegiewicz
(1978) compared Mongolian and Japanese material. 2n=10. Macrosiphoniella
frigidae Ivanoskaya Apterae are yellowish-green with a
pattern of dark dorsal abdominal pigmentation and dark appendages; BL c. 2.7
mm. In small colonies on Artemisia
frigida and Artemisia sp. in
western Siberia, and also recorded from A.
compacta and A. frigida in
Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2004b). Probably it is a member of the dimidiata/teriolana group. Macrosiphoniella
frigidicola Gillette
& Palmer Apteraea are bluish
green, wax-powdered, with siphunculi dusky at apices; BL c.1.6-1.7 mm. On
leaves of Artemisia frigida, and
perhaps sometimes on other Artemisia spp. and Seriphidium tridentatum, although there is possible confusion
with M. abrotani. In central and western North America;
records from eastern North America are more likely to be abrotani. A record from Krascheninnikovia
lanata was probably of vagrants. Oviparae and apterous males appear in
October in Colorado (Palmer 1952). Macrosiphoniella
frigidivora Holman &
Szelegiewicz (Fig.13l) Apterae are green or pinkish green dusted
with fine grey wax powder, with blackish antennae, legs, siphunculi and
cauda; BL 1.6-2.8 mm. At ends of shoots of Artemisia frigida in Mongolia, and also recorded from A. frigida and A. rupestris in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2017a), and from A. turcomanica in Iran (Sedighi et al. 2020b). The latter authors
provide a redescription. A paratype specimen of M. hokkaidensis in the BMNH collection from Japan is very similar, and the distinction between these
two species needs to be confirmed. Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) galatellae Bozhko Apterae are shining brownish black with
black appendages; BL 2.3-2.7 mm. In small colonies of very mobile aphids
on flower stems of Aster and Galatella spp., dropping readily when disturbed (Bozhko 1976b). In eastern Europe (Hungary, Slovakia,
Ukraine), Russia (north Caucasus) and Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2004b, 2012a). A
species described from China, M.
quinifontana, is very similar and possibly a synonym. Macrosiphoniella
gaoloushana Zhang, Chen,
Zhong & Li Apterae are black; BL
1.8-2.5 mm. On Artemisia japonica in
Gansu Province, north-west China (Zhang 1999). Macrosiphoniella
glabra (Gillette & Palmer) Apterae are shining “shamrock green”,
with dusky spots at bases of dorsal hairs, mainly black legs and antennae,
and black siphunculi; BL 1.8-2.3 mm. Singly or in small colonies on leaves
and flowerheads of Artemisia dracunculus in western USA
from Washington to New Mexico, and there is also a record from Chrysothamnus viscidiflorus. Oviparae
and apterous males appear in September-October (Palmer 1952). Macrosiphoniella
(Phalangomyzus) gmelinicola Szelegiewicz Apteraea are shiny black with blackish
antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda; BL c.3.2-3.3 mm. On upper parts of
stems of Artemisia spp. in Korea and east Siberia. Macrosiphoniella
(Phalangomyzus) grandicauda Takahashi
& Moritsu Apterae are pale
yellow or pale green with mainly dark brown antennae and legs, black
siphunculi and pale cauda; BL 2.5-3.9 mm. On Artemisia spp., especially on older leaves, and there are also
host records from Ainsliaea aptera,
Arctium lappa and Petasites
japonicus. In Japan, China,
Korea, east Siberia, India and Nepal, and also recorded from Maryland, USA
(Foottit et al. 2006). A record
from Algeria (Laamari et al. 2013)
requires additional confirmation. 2n=12 (Chen & Zhang, 1985b). Macrosiphoniella
helichrysi Remaudičre (Fig.31f) Apterae are grey with black appendages, the
body covered in wax powder except for a shiny black central dorsal abdonimal
patch and spots anterior to bases of siphunculi; BL 1.4-2.6 mm. On shoot
apices and in flowerheads of Helichrysum
spp., the adult apterae dropping readily from the plant when disturbed.
In southern Europe, Turkey, Iran (Rezwani et
al. 1994), and introduced to South Africa. Aguiar & Ilharco (2005)
provided a detailed redescription. Sexual morphs are apparently unknown. Macrosiphoniella
(Sinosiphoniella) hikosanensis Moritsu (Fig.13g) Apterae are reddish-yellow with reddish
head and prothorax, mainly pale antennae and tibiae, mainly dark femora, dark
antesiphuncular spots, and black siphunculi and cauda (Moritsu 1983); BL
1.5-2.8 mm. On undersides of older leaves of Artemisia spp. in Japan, Korea, and east Siberia. Indian records
of M. hikosanensis apply to other
species, mostly kikungshana, but
Bindra & Sekhon (1969) had a member of the atra group. Macrosiphoniella
(Ramitrichophorus) hillerislambersi Ossiannilsson Apterae are reddish with (in life) a
large black dorsal abdominal spot, and dark appendages including siphunculi
and cauda; BL 1.6-1.9 mm. On Helichrysum
arenarium, colonising parts near or just below ground level. Attended by
ants. In Denmark, Sweden, Germany, Lithuania (Rakauskas et al.
2008) and Switzerland (Heie 1995).
There is also a record from Arctium
tomentosum in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2014d). Macrosiphoniella
himalayana Saha &
Chakrabarti Apterae are blackish; BL
1.9-2.4 mm. on undersides of leaves and in inflorescences of Artemisia
spp. in India and Pakistan.
Oviparae and alate males were collected in October (original
description). Probably a member of the M.
atra group (q.v.). Macrosiphoniella
hokkaidensis Miyazaki Apterae are yellowish green, without wax
according to original description (but see Lee et al. 2002c), with head reddish brown, and antennae, legs
(except base of femora), siphunculi and cauda black; BL 1.8-2.6 mm. Described
from Artemisia montana in Japan,
and there are also records from several Artemisia
spp. in east Siberia (Pashchenko 1988a) and Korea (Lee et al. 2002c, Holman et al. 2006b). M.
frigidivora Holman & Szelegiewicz on A. frigida in Mongolia is closely related and possibly the same
species, although described as wax-powdered in life. Macrosiphoniella
huaidensis Zhang Apterae are green; BL c.2.5 mm. On Artemisia sp. in China. 2n=12 (Chen
& Zhang 1985b) Macrosiphoniella
huochengensis Zhang, Chen,
Zhong & Li Colour of apterae in
life and BL are unrecorded. On leaves of Artemisia
scoparia in Xinjiang-Uygur region of China (Zhang 1999). Also recorded
from Euphorbia lunulata (= esula), but these were presumably
vagrants. Macrosiphoniella
insignata Kadyrbekov Apterae are shining black; BL 1.3-1.7 mm.
At shoot apices of an Artemisia sp.
in south-east Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 1999a). Macrosiphoniella
(Papillomyzus) iranica Nieto Nafría
& Pérez Hidalgo Colour of apterae
in life is unknown, BL 2.8-3.2 mm. On
an unidentified Centaurea sp. in
western Iran (Nieto Nafría & Pérez Hidalgo 2013b). Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) ixeridis Holman, Lee
& Havelka Apterae are pale green
to yellowish green with dark head, dark tips to appendages and black
siphunculi; BL 2.3-2.9 mm. On upper parts of Ixeris chinensis and Youngia
sonchifolia in Korea (Holman et al.
2006). Macrosiphoniella
(Ramitrichophorus) janckei Börner (Fig.31g) Apterae are reddish brown to black, with
green spots at bases of siphunculi, powdered with wax; BL 1.8-2.0 mm. On
stalks, flowerheads and undersides of leaves of Helichrysum
arenarium. In northern Germany, Poland, Lithuania (Rakauskas et al. 2008), Ukraine,
Russia (west Siberia, Volga region, North Caucasus) and Kazakhstan
(Kadyrbekov 2011c). Oviparae and apterous males occur in Germany in late
September (Müller 1975a). Macrosiphoniella
jaroslavi Szelegiewicz Apterae are green, dusted with fine grey
wax powder, with blackish antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda; BL 1.6-2.3
mm. On tips of shoots and in inflorescences of Artemisia messerschmidtiana (var. discolor) in North Korea. Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) jaroslaviholmani Stekolshchikov & Khureva Apterae are green, yellow-green or green with
yellow-green abdomen, dull glistening, without wax powder, with antennae dark
except at base of ANT III, legs mainly pale except for tarsi and apices of
femora and tibiae, siphunculi mainly dark and cauda pale to grey; BL 3.2-3.8
mm. On shoot apices and in inflorescences of Artemisia spp. (arctica,
tilesii) in north-east Siberia (Chukotka). The life cycle is abbreviated;
old fundatrices, apterous and alate viviparae, oviparae and apterous males
were all collected in early August (Stekolshchikov & Khureva 2015, as M. jaroslavi). [The name was replaced
by Stekolshchikov & Khureva (2018) because it is a secondary homonym of M. jaroslavi Szelegiewicz.] Macrosiphoniella
kalimpongense R.C. Basu
& Raychaudhuri Appearance of
apterae in life is unknown; BL 2.6-3.3 mm. On Artemisia vulgaris and Artemisia sp. in India (West Bengal)
and Nepal (BMNH collection). Macrosiphoniella
kareliniae Kadyrbekov,
Renxin & Shao Apterae are
greenish with grey wax film, siphunculi brown with basal third pale; BL
2.0-2.5 mm. On stems of Karelinia
caspia in central and south Kazakhstan and Xinjiang-Uygur region of
western China (Kadyrbekov et al.
2002). Macrosiphoniella
kaufmanni Börner (Fig.13m) Apterae are green, lightly wax-dusted
(according to Bozhko 1976), with dark siphunculi and cauda; BL c.1.9-2.2 mm.
On Artemisia
pontica in Czech Republic and Hungary, and also recorded from Ukraine on A. arenaria (Bozhko 1976), and from
Italy on A. alba (Barbagallo &
Pollini 2014). There is no adequate description of this species. Remaudičre
& Leclant (1972) distinguish it from M.
chamaemelifoliae. Monoecious
holocyclic according to Börner (1952), but sexual morphs are undescribed.
Macrosiphoniella
kermanensis Mehrparvar
& Rezwani Apterae are greyish
green thinly covered in wax powder; BL 2.1-2.6 mm. Alatae have 5-8 secondary
rhinaria on ANT III. In sparse colonies in April on shoots of Artemisia (= Seriphidium) sieberi in
Iran (Mehrparvar & Rezwani 2007). Life cycle and sexual morphs are
unknown. Very similar to M. seriphidii
and M. terraealbae, and the
characters distinguishing it from those species could be those of the
fundatrix morph. Macrosiphoniella khinganica Pashchenko Apterae are shining green; BL c.2.3 mm. On Artemisia mongolica in east Siberia. Originally described as a subspecies of M. pulvera (Pashchenko 1998b), but differing from that species in several morphological features, including longer antennal hairs, and given separate species status by Kadyrbekov (2019). Macrosiphoniella
kikungshana Takahashi Apterae are shining brown with mainly
dark brown appendages; BL 2.1-3.2 mm. On undersides of older leaves of Artemisia spp. in China, Korea, east
Siberia, Nepal and India (Sikkim).
Szelegiewicz (1980) redescribed the species, and also described a
population on A. sylvatica in Korea
with shorter dorsal hairs and paler femora as a subspecies, A.
kikungshana ssp. sylvaticae, but
Holman et al (2006b) regard the subdivision as unjustified. Oviparae occur in
October (Sikkim). Some of the Indian records of M.
hikosanensis should be referred to this species (see R.C. Basu &
Raychaudhuri 1976b). 2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
kirgisica Umarov Apterae are greyish green with dark green
spots on dorsal abdomen, and dark brown antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda;
BL c. 2.0-2.1 mm. In large colonies on
stems of numerous Artemisia/Seriphidium
spp. (Kadyrbekov 2003c, 2017a) in Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan, Xinjiang-Uygur region of China). We could not distinguish this
species from M. dimidiata on the
basis of the published description. Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) konyratica Kadyrbekov Apterae are green, wax-powdered, with
blackish appendages; BL c.1.8 mm (2 specimens). On stems and flowers of Galatella sedifolia ssp. biflora on rocky mountain slopes in
central Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2018b). Macrosiphoniella
(Sinosiphoniella) kuwayamai Takahashi (Fig.13f) Apterae are dull green-black dusted with
transverse bands of grey wax powder, reddish head and mainly black antennae,
legs, siphunculi and cauda; BL 1.5-3.2 mm. On Artemisia spp., usually living on lower parts of stems and older
leaves. In Japan, Korea, China and E Siberia. Szelegiewicz (1980) redescribed
apt. and al. vivip. of this species from Korea. Macrosiphoniella
lambersi Verma Colour of apterae in life unknown; siphunculi
pale and cauda with 7 hairs in the holotype according to the original
description, but an apt. in the BMNH collection labelled as a paratype (leg.
K.D. Verma) has dark siphunculi and its cauda has 11 hairs. The measurement of the base of ANT VI must
also be wrong in the original description; the paratype has ANT PT/BASE ratio
of 3.86. On Artemisia
scoparia in India (Jammu). It has been erroneously synonymised with M. alativica in catalogues. Macrosiphoniella
lazoica Pashchenko Apterae are blackish green; BL c.2.3 mm.
At stem bases of Saussurea pulchella,
attended by ants. In east Siberia (Pashchenko, 1999b). Macrosiphoniella
leucanthemi (Ferrari) Apterae are yellowish green, with a darker
green or reddish brown band between the siphunculi, and appendages with
contrasting pale and dark sections; BL 2.3-2.7 mm. Alatae have conspicuously
brown-bordered wing veins. On undersides of basal leaves of Leucanthemum
spp. in Europe (Italy, Hungary, France, Netherlands), and also recorded
from USA (Oregon, Pennsylvania, Maryland). Stoetzel & Miller (1999)
provided a redescription of apterae and alatae. Macrosiphoniella
lidiae Umarov Apterae are green, powdered with wax,
with appendages dark except for bases of ANT III and siphunculi; BL c. 1.9 mm. In large colonies at tops of
stems of an Artemisia sp. in Kazakhstan. Macrosiphoniella
lijiangensis Zhang, Zhong
& Zhang (= Macrosiphoniella
sensorinuda Zhang, Zhong & Zhang)
Appearance in life is unknown: BL 2.4-2.8 mm. On Artemisia vulgaris in China (Hengduan mountain region). Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) linariae (Koch) (Fig.15a,b) Apterae are brownish black, with black
appendages; BL c. 2.4-2.8 mm. On stems of Aster
linosyris in Germany, northern Italy, and also reported from Greece
(Tsitsipis et al. 2007). Oviparae
and alate males occur in October (Hille Ris Lambers 1938). Macrosiphoniella
lithospermi Bozhko Apterae are shining brown with dark brown
dorsal markings, siphunculi and cauda black; BL c. 3 mm. In colonies on stems
of Lithospermum arvense in Ukraine
(Bozhko 1976b). Macrosiphoniella
lopatini (Umarov) Apterae are grass green powdered with
greyish wax, with siphunculi dark only on
reticulated part; BL c.3.4-3.6 mm.
On stems of an Artemisia sp.
in Tajikistan, and also recorded from Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2017a). Alatae
are unknown. Macrosiphoniella
ludovicianae (Oestlund) Apterae are glaucous green or yellowish
green dusted with greyish white wax; BL 2.0-2.8 mm. Commonly on leaves of Artemisia ludoviciana, but it has also
been recorded from A. vulgaris. A
record from Tanacetum sp. may have
been a misidentification, and a record
from Krascheninnikovia (=Axyris) lanata was probably of vagrants. Widely distributed in North
America (Palmer 1952, Robinson
1987). Oviparae and alate males occur
in October. 2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
maculata Nevsky Apterae are yellow-green or green with
black dorsal spots and antesiphuncular sclerites; BL 1.8 mm. On Medicago sativa (which is unlikely to
be its true host) in the Pamirs at
3,600 m, in Tajikistan. Macrosiphoniella
madeirensis Aguiar &
Ilharco Apterae are pale grey mostly
covered with fine whitish wax powder but leaving black central dorsal spot;
BL 1.9-2.9 mm. On terminal shoots and leaf petioles of Helichrysum melaleucum in Madeira (Aguiar & Ilharco 2005). Macrosiphoniella
(Ramitrichophorus) medvedevi (Bozhko) (Fig.31e) Apterae are grey with brownish red
speckling, or reddish yellow; BL 1.6-2.6 mm. On stems and flowers of Helichrysum
arenarium in Ukraine and Poland, attended by ants (Szelegiewicz 1958, as M. nasti). It is also reported to
occur in Iran (Rezwani et al.
1994). Macrosiphoniella
miestingeri (Börner) Colour of apterae in life is unrecorded;
BL 2.7-3.0 mm. Under lower leaves of Tanacetum
corymbosum, which are curved and yellowed. Only known from Germany. Macrosiphoniella
millefolii (De
Geer) Plate 27a
(Fig.5g) Apterae are yellowish green, powdered with
grey wax except for spinal stripe on abdomen and presiphuncular spots, and
with black appendages (see
influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 2.1-3.6 mm. On Achillea spp., especially A.
millefolium, forming colonies especially in the inflorescences. Also
occasionally found on plants in related genera (Leucanthemum, Tanacetum, Tripleurospermum). Common throughout
most of Europe, in west Siberia, Iran, Central Asia (Kadyrbekov 2017a), and
introduced to North America. In east Siberia a form occurs with more
secondary rhinaria in apterae (38-59, as opposed to 8-28 in European
populations) and a rather shorter antennal terminal process (M.
millefolii ssp. orientalis Pashchenko
1998). M. sudkharis (q.v.) could be
a cold-temperature form of M.
millefolli. Oviparae and alate males occur in
September-October in north-west Europe (Heie 1995). Sobhani (1970) studied
the biology, life cycle and morphology of M.
millefolii in Germany. Morlacchi et
al. (2011) studied its developmnet on A.
collina. 2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
mutellinae Börner Apterae are thickly dusted with grey wax;
BL 1.7-2.3 mm. On Artemisia genepi and
A. mutellina in Austria. A single, presumably vagrant,
aptera was found on Leontopodium
alpinum in the French Alps (Remaudičre 1954). Macrosiphoniella
(Chosoniella) myohyangsani Szelegiewicz Apterae are pale green, with
lead-coloured posterior abdomen and blackish appendages; BL 2.7-3.7 mm. On
lower parts of stems of Artemisia spp.
in Mongolia, east Siberia, China and Korea (Lee et al. 2002c). Holman et al.
(2006a) pointed out that this species may not be specifically distinct from M. spinipes. 2n=12 (Chen & Zhang
1985b). Macrosiphoniella
(Ramitrichophorus) nikolajevi Kadyrbekov Apterae are reddish brown; BL 2.1-2.4 mm.
On flower stalks of Helichrysum
maracandicum in south Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 1999b), and on H. arenarium
in Iran (Kanturski & Barjadze 2018). Alatae have been described by
Kanturski & Barjadze (2018). Macrosiphoniella
nitida Börner Apterae are light olive-brown or reddish,
shiny on back but wax-powdered on abdomen, with dark antennae and tibiae,
mainly pale femora and black siphunculi and cauda; BL c. 2.6-2.9 mm. On Artemisia dracunculus in Germany,
former Yugoslavia, Iran (Kanturski & Barjadze 2018), western Siberia and
Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2012a). Aphids
collected on this host in Mongolia with a longer R IV+V and shorter dorsal
hairs are regarded as a subspecies, M. nitida ssp. soongarica Szelegiewicz (Holman & Szelegiewicz 1978),
although should perhaps have full species status. This subspecies is also
recorded from south-east Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov & Aoitzhanova 2005). M. dracunculi appears to be closely related, as also does M. piceaphis, described from
north-west China on Picea sp.
(G.Zhang 1999, as Piceaphis). Macrosiphoniella
(Phalangomyzus) oblonga (Mordwilko) Plate 27c Apterae are long-bodied, pale green or
apple green, with a darker green spinal stripe, and mostly pale appendages (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 3.0-5.1 mm. Usually found dispersed on
undersides of lower leaves of Artemisia
vulgaris, also sometimes on
other Artemisia spp., on cultivated
florists’ chrysanthemum (Dendranthema
indicum, morifolium, frutescens), and occasionally on
plants in other related genera (Leucanthemum,
Tanacetum). Oviparae and apterous
males occur in September-October in western Europe. M. oblonga occurs throughout Europe and across Asia to Japan and
Taiwan. A record from Alaska (International Barcode of Life Consortium 2016)
requires further confirmation. Some Asian populations have been given the
status of separate species; M. hidaensis Takahashi &
Moritsu in Japan and east Siberia, M. paraoblonga R.C. Basu &
Raychudhuri in India, and M. similioblonga Zhang in China
(also recorded from Korea; Lee et al.
2002c). Further work would be needed to show that these are not all one
geographically variable species. 2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
olgae (Nevsky) Apterae are brownish yellow, with dark
dorsal spots, wax-dusted; BL 2.2-2.8 mm. On Gnaphalium spp. (sylvaticum,
supinum) in Central Asia. Alatae are unknown. Macrosiphoniella
oronensis Szelegiewicz Apterae are shiny brown, with mainly pale
antennae and legs and blackish brown siphunculi and cauda; BL 2.0-2.4 mm. On
undersides of older leaves of Artemisia
japonica in North Korea. Macrosiphoniella
(Phalangomyzus) pallidipes Holman, Lee
& Havelka Apterae are green with
black antennae, tips of legs, siphunculi and cauda; BL 3.1-3.5 mm. On Artemisia spp. in Korea (Holman et al. 2006). Macrosiphoniella
(Papillomyzus) papillata Holman Apterae are greyish green, covered with a
waxy secretion, with black appendages; BL 2.1-3.2 mm. On stems and undersides
of leaves of Centaurea spp., and also found on Crupina vulgaris (with heavily infested Centaurea close by). Described from Crimea, and since found in
Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov & Aoitzhanova 2005), Iran, Syria, Turkey,
Bulgaria, Greece and France (Remaudičre & Remaudičre 1997, p.305). Macrosiphoniella
(Ramitrichophorus) paradoxa (Bozhko) Apterae are matt dark brown, with black
antennae and siphunculi; BL c.1.6 mm. On shoot tips and among flowers of Helichrysum suaveolens (? an
untraceable name) in Ukraine and southern Russia (Shaposhnikov 1964). It is closely
related to U. janckei, and possibly
a geographical or seasonal variant of that species. Macrosiphoniella
paucisetosa Robinson Colour of apterae in life is unrecorded,
probably pale greenish except for blackish brown antennae (beyond base of
III), tibiae and siphunculi (except basally); BL 1.8-2.5 mm. On Artemisia spp. in Manitoba, Canada
(Robinson 1987). Macrosiphoniella
(Phalangomyzus) pennsylvanica (Pepper) Apterae are green with two longitudinal
rows of wax markings; BL 1.9-2.5 mm. On Achillea
millefolium in North America (Arizona,
California, N Carolina, Pennsylvania, Tennessee).
Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae and alate males in October (original
description, as Macrosiphum). Macrosiphoniella
(Phalangomyzus) persequens (Walker) Apterae are green, with darker green
spinal stripe, and dusky/dark apices to antennal segments, legs and
siphunculi (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery);
BL 4.2-5.2 mm. On undersides of lower leaves of Tanacetum vulgare in Europe, and also recorded from Pyrethrum millefoliatum (Bozhko
1976b). Oviparae and apterous males occur in September-October. 2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
procerae Bozhko Apterae are matt green, lightly
wax-dusted, with dark apices of siphunculi; BL c. 1.9 mm. In small colonies
on upper parts of stems of Artemisia
procera (= abrotanum)
in Ukraine (Bozhko 1976b) and
south-west Russia (Kadyrbekov 2014g), and
also recorded from A. glauca (= dracunculus) in western Siberia and A. terrae-albae in Kazakhstan. Macrosiphoniella
pseudoartemisiae Shinji Apterae are pale yellow-brown with
greenish tinge (slide label, Japanese specimens, BMNH collection); BL 1.8-2.8
mm. A common species on Artemisia spp.
in east and south-east Asia (Japan, Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, India, Sri
Lanka) and introduced to South America (Argentina, Ortego et al. 2006); Brazil, BMNH
collection). L.K.Ghosh (1972b) described the ovipara from Bhutan and Maity
& Chakrabarti (1981b) found one in Uttar Pradesh in October, but males
have not been reported. There has been some confusion with another common and
widely distributed east Asian species, M.
yomogifoliae, which has entirely black tibiae. This is usually a reliable
means of distinguishing the two species, but one population of M. pseudoartemisiae from Java in the
BMNH collection also has entirely black hind tibiae. Another discriminant is the caudal hair
number; 10-14 in pseudoartemisiae,
16-32 in yomogifoliae. 2n=10 (Pal & Khuda-Bukhsh 1982, Dutta
& Gautam 1993) or 2n=12 (Kar & Khuda-Bukhsh 1988; perhaps this was
misidentified yomogifoliae?). Macrosiphoniella
ptarmicae Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are green, wax-powdered, with
olive patches at bases of siphunculi; BL 2.2-3.3 mm. On Achillea ptarmica in Europe, and eastward to Central Asia.
Oviparae and alate males occur in September-October. Sobhani (1970) studied
the biology, life cycle and morphology of M.
ptarmicae in Germany. Macrosiphoniella
pulvera (Walker) Apterae are greyish green or greyish
white, heavily wax-powdered; BL 1.9-2.9 mm. On undersides of leaves of Seriphidium maritimum, with which they
are concolorous. There are also
records from several other Artemisia and
Seriphidium spp. Widely distributed
mostly in coastal regions of Europe (except Iberian peninsula?), and eastward
across Asia to Mongolia; the Mongolian aphids, collected on A. adamsi, differed in some respects
from European populations (Holman & Szelegiewicz 1978). Oviparae and
apterous males of M. pulvera appear
in September in Europe. Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) quinifontana Zhang, Chen, Zhong & Li Colour of apterae in life is unrecorded;
BL c.1.6 mm. On stems of Aster
tataricus and Artemisia sp. (a
less likely host) in Gansu
Province, China (G. Zhang 1999). It’s distinction from M. galatellae needs to be verified. Macrosiphoniella
remaudierei Barbagallo
& Nieto Nafría Colour of apterae
in life is unknown, probably green with wax dusting; BL 1.6-2.3 mm. On Helichrysum armenium in mountainous
regions of Iran (Barbagallo & Nieto Nafría 2016). Probably closely
related to M. aetnensis. Macrosiphoniella
(Papillomyzus) riedeli Szelegiewicz Colour of apterae in life is unknown; BL
2.9-3.4 mm. On Carduus, Centaurea and Cuprina in south-west Asia (Syria, Lebanon, Sinai, Iran). Alatae
are not described and the biology is unknown. The only difference between
this species and M. papillata seems
to be in the degree of
pigmentation, and it should possibly be synonymised with that species. Macrosiphoniella
sachalinensis Pashchenko Apterae are grey-green, wax-dusted; BL
c.1.9-2.0 mm. In inflorescences of Artemisia
stellariana in Sakhalin (Pashchenko 1998b). Macrosiphoniella sanborni (Gillette) Plate 27b Apterae are shiny, dark red‑brown to
blackish brown, broadly spindle‑shaped, with black, relatively short
and thick siphunculi, shorter than the black cauda (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery);
BL 1.0-2.3 mm. A cosmopolitan pest on cultivated florists’ chrysanthemum (Dendranthema
indicum, morifolium, frutescens) on undersides of
leaves. Of east Asian origin, where it
often occurs on other Compositae (Anthemis, Artemisia, Aster). Sexual morphs are
unknown. See also Blackman &
Eastop (2000). 2n=12 (many samples
from UK and India, and one from China; but Chen & Zhang (1985a,b)
recorded 2n=10 for a sample from China). Macrosiphoniella
santolinifoliae Kadyrbekov Apterae are shining blackish brown; BL
1.6-1.9 mm. On flower stalks of Artemisia
santolinifolia in south-east Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 1999a). A
member of the M. atra group. Macrosiphoniella
(Sinosiphoniella) saussureae Holman &
Szelegiewicz (= Macrosiphoniella
chita Pashchenko) Apterae are
reddish brown to brownish black; BL 1.5-2.2 mm. Apterae have secondary
rhinaria distrbuted III 9-24, IV 0-4, and alatae have them ditributed III
20+, IV 5-6. On flower stalks of Saussurea salicifolia, attended by
ants (the short siphunculi and cauda are modifications for ant attendance).
Mongolia and east Siberia (Pashchenko 1999b, as M. chita). Macrosiphoniella
scopariae Bozhko Apterae are rose pink, finely dusted with
greyish wax, BL c. 2.3 mm. In large, fairly dispersed colonies on undersides
of leaves of Artemisia scoparia in
Ukraine (Bozhko 1976b), and also recorded from several other Artemisia/Seriphidium spp. in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2017a). Kadyrbekov
(2019) distinguished populations of green aphids on flower stems of Artemisia in sandy deserts of southern
Kazakhstan as a subspecies, M. scopariae deserticola
Kadyrbekov. Macrosiphoniella
sejuncta (Walker) (Fig.5h) Apterae are variable, often a mix of green
and brown individuals, or green mottled with brown, with pale-based
siphunculi (see influential
points/Gallery); BL 2.5-3.1 mm. On Achillea
millefolium, living on leaves close to ground level. Europe, and eastward
to Iran and west Siberia. Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and apterous
males in September-October (Heie 1995). 2n=10. Macrosiphoniella
seriphidii Kadyrbekov Apterae are pale green with silvery
sheen, siphunculi dark distally; BL 2.1-2.7 mm. On Artemisia and Seriphidium spp. in Kazakhstan and Xinjiang-Uygur
region of China (Kadyrbekov 2000, Kadyrbekov et al. 2002, Kadyrbekov 2017a), and also recorded from Tajikistan
(Kadyrbekov 2013c) and Russia (Altai; Kadyrbekov 2014g). It is very similar
to M. terraealbae. Macrosiphoniella
sibirica Ivanoskaya Apterae are greenish brown with dark
antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda: BL c. 3.1 mm. On stems and
influorescences of Artemisia spp.
in western Siberia and Kazakhstan.
Close to or synonymous with M.
artemisiae. Macrosiphoniella
sieversianae Holman &
Szelegiewicz Apterae are green,
powdered with whitish wax, with antennae and legs mainly dark, and siphunculi
dark distally; BL 2.2-2.8 mm. On upper parts of stems of Artemisia sieversiana in Mongolia, and also on this and other Artemisia spp. in Kazakhstan and
western Siberia (Kadyrbekov 2009b, 2014g, 2017a). Macrosiphoniella
sikkimartemisiae Agarwala
& Raychaudhuri Appearance in
life and size of apterae are unknown; antennae and legs partly pale,
siphunculi and cauda dark. On Artemisia
sp. in India (Sikkim). Macrosiphoniella
sikhotealiensis Pashchenko Apterae are green, wax-dusted, with dark
brown to black appendages; BL c.3.6 mm. Other morphs are unknown. On upper
parts of stems of Artemisia stolonifera
in east Siberia (Pashchenko 1998b). Macrosiphoniella
silvestrii Roberti Apterae are covered in white wax except
for shiny black areas on dorsum; BL 2.8-3.0 mm. On upper parts of stems
of Achillea, Anthemis arvensis and Matricaria in southern Italy
(Barbagallo 1970, Barbagallo & Stroyan 1982), and now also recorded from
Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2018a). Macrosiphoniella
sojaki Holman & Szelegiewicz Appearance of apterae in life is unknown,
probably wax-powdered, with blackish brown antennae, legs, siphunculi and
cauda; BL 1.7-2.3 mm. On Artemisia
rutifolia in Mongolia (original description) and eastern Kazakhstan
(Kadyrbekov 2009a), and also reported to occu in Iran (Rezwani 2010). Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) soosi Szelegiewicz Apterae are light green with black head
and appendages; BL 1.9-3.0 mm. On Galatella
sedifolia (= punctata), living on undersides of leaves, in Hungary, and also recorded from G.
sedifolia ssp. biflora, G.
fastigiiformis G. chromopappa and G. villosa. In
Hungary, Romania and Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov & Aoitzhanova 2005,
Kadyrbekov 2017a). Macrosiphoniella
(Chosoniella) spinipes A.N.
Basu (Fig.13d) Apterae are shiny green with blackish
siphunculi and dusky cauda; BL 1.8-3.8 mm. On undersides of leaves and young
shoots of Artemisia vulgaris in
north-east India (R.C. Basu & Raychaudhuri 1976b). 2n=10 (Kar et al. 1990). Macrosiphoniella
staegeri Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are dark brown to black, dusted
with whitish wax; BL c.2.7-2.9 mm. On leaves and stems of Centaurea
spp. in southern Europe, Turkey, Armenia, Iran, Tajikistan and Kazakhstan
(Kadyrbekov 2014e). A subspecies was
described from Ukraine (M. staegeri ssp. ucrainica Bozhko). Oviparae and alate males were found in
Turkey in October (Tuatay & Remaudičre 1964); probably anholocyclic in
mild climates, e.g Sicily (Patti 1983).
Macrosiphoniella
subaequalis Börner Apterae are light brown to pinkish dusted
with whitish grey wax, with dark antennae, siphunculi and cauda; legs with
femora dark except at base and tibiae with pale middle section. BL 2.1-3.1
mm. On young shoots of Artemisia
campestris (where it may be mixed with M. dimidiata), and also recorded from A. rupestris and A.
variabilis. In continental Europe
(France, Poland, Austria, Switzerland, Italy). It is also reported to occur
in Iran (Rezwani 2010). Jorg & Lampel (1988) reviewed information about
this species. Macrosiphoniella
subterranea (Koch) Apterae are reddish brown covered with
greyish wax except on mid-dorsum and around bases of siphunculi, appendages
with contrasting pale and black sections, siphunculi and cauda black; BL
2.6-3.5 mm. On undersides of leaves of Leucanthemum
spp., causing yellow spots. Widely distributed in Europe (Heie 1995), in Iran (Rezwani
2010) and Kazakhstan (where it was collected on Chrysanthemum indicum; Kadyrbkov 2017a), and also in North
America (Ontario, Pennsylvania, Robinson 1987; Oregon, Jensen et al. 2020). Oviparae and alate males
occur in October-November. 2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
sudhakaris Banerjee,
A.K. Ghosh & Chakrabarti Apterae
are pale green (immatures are white), with mainly dark appendages; BL 1.3-1.6
mm. On inflorescences and young leaves of Achillea
millefolium at a high altitude in Uttar Pradesh, India. This is possibly
a cold-temperature form of M.
millefolii. Macrosiphoniella
sunshine Jensen, Barjadze &
Kanturski Apterae are pale green with darker green longitudinal spinal stripe and dark
green patches around siphuncular bases, antennae black, legs mainly pale
brown, siphunculi pale basally and brown to black distally, and cauda pale;
BL c.1.5-2.8 mm. On flower stems and leaves of Eriophyllum lanatum (“Oregon Sunshine”) in western USA
(Washington, Oregon, California). Fundatrices were collected in April and
oviparae in October (Jensen et al. 2020);
males are unknown. Macrosiphoniella
szalaymarzsoi Szelegiewicz Apterae are green, powdered with fine
grey wax, with antennae dark distally, legs dark except for bases of femora
and middle parts of hind tibiae, and siphunculi dark distally and paler at
base; BL 2.0-2.7 mm. On terminal shoots of Artemisia alba ssp. saxatilis
(= alba) in Hungary; also
collected on A. herba-alba in
Israel (BMNH collection, leg. V.F.Eastop), on Artemisia sp. in Iran (Sedighi et al. 2020b), and recorded from several Artemisia and Seriphidium spp.
in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2004b, 2009b, 2014e). Sedighi et al. (2020b) provided a redescription. It is separated in the
key from three similar species [cegmidi,
longirostrata (= altaica) and taesongsanensis] on the basis of the published descriptions, but
the discriminants given are liable to environmentally induced variation, and
the group evidently requires further study. 2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
tadshikana Narzikulov Apterae are green, wax-dusted, with siphunculi dark except at bases; BL
c.2.6 mm. On upper parts of stems of Artemisia
ferganensis in Tajikistan. M. alativica may be closely related. Macrosiphoniella
taesongsanensis Szelegiewicz Apterae are green, powdered with fine
grey wax. The head is dark brown, with a colourless, semicircular spot at
posterior margin. Antennae and siphunculi are pale basally and dark distally,
legs mainly pale; BL c. 1.7-2.0 mm. On terminal parts of shoots of Artemisia spp. in Korea (Lee et al. 2002c), China (Zhong & Liu
1986), east Siberia (Pashchenko 1988a) and east Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov
2004b). (See comment under M. szalaymarzsoi.) Macrosiphoniella tanacetaria (Kaltenbach)
Apterae are grey-green, dusted with fine wax powder, with black
antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 3.2-4.1 mm.
The principal host plant is Tanacetum
vulgare, where it colonises the
flowers and flower stems in summer, but the range of reserve hosts seems
greater than in most Macrosiphoniella,
including records from other Tanacetum
spp., species of Achillea, Anthemis, Artemisia, Aster, Bidens, Chamaemelum, Chrysanthemum,
Dendranthema and Matricaria, and also Salvia officinalis (Lamiaceae).
Monoecious holocyclic on T.
vulgare, with alate males. Throughout Europe, Morocco, Israel, Iran,
Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, west and east Siberia, and
introduced to North and South America.
Two forms in the Mediterranean region and one in Central Asia are
regarded as subspecies; one of these, M.
tanacetaria ssp. bonariensis Blanchard, has siphunculi longer relative to the cauda, and
is the form that has been introduced into South America. Another, M.
tanacetaria ssp. italica Hille
Ris Lambers, occurs in Italy, Austria and former Yugoslavia and appears to be
specific to Tanacetum corymbosum.
The third, M. tanacetaria ssp. tianshanica Narzikulov & Umarov,
is described from alatae in Tajikistan which have fewer rhinaria on ANT III
and a much shorter cauda. Massonet et
al. (2002) and Massonet & Weisser (2004) studied genetic variation in
French and German populations, and Loxdale et al. (2011a, b)
analysed variation on a smaller spatial scale using microstatellite markers. 2n = 12. Macrosiphoniella
tapuskae (Hottes & Frison) Plate 27d (Fig.5i) Apterae are pale green, in life with small
darker green dorsal spots on abdomen anterior to the siphuncular bases (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery);
BL 2.5-3.3 mm. On various Anthemidae (Achillea,
Anacyclus, Anthemis, Argyranthemum,
Artemisia, Chrysanthemum, Matricaria,
Tanacetum), usually feeding on
lower leaves. In Europe, and eastward to north-west, central and southern
Russia, south-west and Central Asia, North Africa and North America, and more
recently recorded from Argentina (Ortego et
al. 2006). Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae and apterous males in
September-November. [Kadyrbekov (2019) suggests that M. tapuskae should be treated as a subspecies of M. aktashica (Nevsky).] 2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
teriolana Hille Ris Lambers (Fig.13i) Apterae are yellowish green, powdered with
grey wax, with appengages all black except for base of ANT III; BL c.1.7-2.0
mm. On Artemisia campestris in
northern Italy. It is only known definitely from the type locality; other
records refer to M. dimidiata. Macrosiphoniella
terraealbae Kadyrbekov Apterae are pale green with silvery
sheen, antennae and legs brown to dark brown, siphunculi dark except basally;
BL 1.5-2.4 mm. On Artemisia
terrae-albae in Kazakhstan, south-west Russia and Xinjiang-Uygur region
of China (Kadyrbekov 2000, 2014g; Kadyrbekov et al. 2002). Kadyrbekov (2017a) records it from several other Artemisia/Seriphidium spp. It is very similar to M. seriphidii. Macrosiphoniella
(Papillomyzus) tuberculata (Nevsky) Apterae are green, with siphunculi brown,
paler at base; BL 1.8-2.9 mm. On stems and undersides of leaves of Picnomon acarna, and also recorded
from Carduus and Cousinia spp. (Kadyrbekov 2017a). In
the Middle East and Central Asia (Israel, Iran, Syria, Turkey, Kazakhstan,
Uzbekistan). Monoecious holocyclic in Turkey with oviparae and alate males in
October (Tuatay & Remaudičre 1965). Macrosiphoniella
(Papillomyzus) tuberculatumartemisicola Bozhko Apterae are green, powdered with grey
wax, with appendages mainly dark; BL c. 2.8 mm. In small colonies on flower
stems of Seriphidium tauricum in
Crimea, and also recorded from Iran (Rezwani 1994). Macrosiphoniella
umarovi Narzikulov (Fig.13k) Apterae are green, wax-dusted, with mainly
brown appendages but pale spots at apices of femora, and pale cauda; BL c.
1.9-2.2 mm. On leaves and stems of an Artemisia
sp. in Afghanistan. Keyed on basis
of specimens in BMNH collection agreeing with the original description,
collected in 1975 from Artemisia sp.
in Afghanistan (leg. R. van den Bosch). Macrosiphoniella
usquertensis Hille Ris
Lambers Apterae are brownish,
powdered with greyish wax, with antennae and legs yellow and black,
siphunculi and cauda black (see
influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 2.4-3.2 mm. Principal host plant is Achillea millefolium, but also on
other Achillea spp., and sometimes
found on Artemisia campestris. It
lives on the lower leaves of Achillea,
which eventually turn brownish and wither (Heie 1995). Widely distributed in
Europe, in Iran and Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2017a), and an alata has been
found in Quebec, Canada (Robinson 1987).
Oviparae and alate males occur in north-west Europe in late
August-October. Sobhani (1970) studied the biology, life cycle and morphology
of M. usquertensis in Germany, and
Sobhani & Iglisch (1972) compared morphology of males with that of M. ptarmicae. Macrosiphoniella
vallesiacae Jörg &
Lampel Apterae are dark green
powdered with greyish white wax, with appendages mainly pale to dark brown;
BL 1.7-2.4 mm. On apices of young shoots of Artemisia vallesiaca in alpine Switzerland and Italy (Lampel
& Meier 2007), and subsequently reported from Artemisia (= Seriphidium)
aucheri and A. (S.) sieberi in Iran (Mehrparvar 2017). Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) victoriae Kadyrbekov Apterae are dark green, with mainly dark
brown appendages; BL 2.2-2.4 mm. On Saussurea
elegans in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 1999a), and subsequently recorded from Jurinea (=Pilostemon) filifolia (Kadyrbekov
2014d). Macrosiphoniella
xeranthemi Bozhko Apterae are pale brown with black
appendages; BL 2.2-3.0 mm. On Xeranthemum
spp. in eastern Europe
(Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Ukraine) and Kazkhstan (Kadyrbekov 2017a). Macrosiphoniella
xinjiangica Kadyrbekov,
Renxin & Shao Apterae are bright
green; BL 2.5-3.0 mm. On stems of Artemisia
dracunculus in Xinjiang-Uygur region of western China (Kadyrbekov et al. 2002). Macrosiphoniella yangi Takahashi Only apparently known from original
collection, from “a composite”. Placed in Asterobium
by Szelegiewicz (1980), but it does not seem to belong there, and it is
unclear where the host record from Aster
sp. originated. Macrosiphoniella
(Asterobium) yomenae (Shinji) (Fig.15c) Apterae are dirty yellow-brown to green
with brown-black head and pronotum,
brown presiphuncluar sclerites, and brown-black appendages; BL 2.6-3.5
mm. On Aster and related genera (Boltonia, Erigeron, Galatella,
Kalimeris) in Japan, Korea, China and east Siberia. Also recorded from Hieracium sp. in east Siberia
(Pashchenko 1988a), and from Artemisia and
Chrysanthemum in Korea (Lee et al. 2002c, and BMNH collection),
which may indicate a wider host range, but this needs further confirmation.
2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
(Sinosiphoniella) yomogicola (Matsumura) Apterae are grey-green to blackish or
rust brown, with dark transverse bars on dorsal abdomen, and dark antennae,
legs, siphunculi and cauda; BL 2.0-3.2 mm. On Artemisia spp., attended by ants under earthen shelters (Miyazaki
1971); ant attendance has been shown to be necessary for the aphid colony’s
survival (Watanabe et al. 2016,
2019), and influences the proportion of the different colour morphs within a
colony (Hasegawa et al. 2019). In Japan, China, and east Siberia
(Sakhalin, Kuril Islands). Also recorded from Dendranthema indica. A record from Ixeridium dentatum in Korea is probably based on a
misidentification (Holman et al.
2006a). Macrosiphoniella yomogifoliae (Shinji)
Apterae are yellow-green to deep mid‑green, powdered with grey
wax, with mainly dark antennae and legs, black siphunculi and brown cauda; BL
2.0-3.5 mm. On Artemisia spp., Bidens spp., Chrysanthemum spp. (morifolium, nipponicum) and Tanacetum spp.
in east and south-east Asia (Japan, Korea, China, east Siberia, India, Nepal,
Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia). Also recorded from Gnaphalium multiceps (= affine) in Korea (Lee et al. 2002c). Monoecious holocyclic
with sexual morphs in October; an ovipara was described from Nipponathemum nipponicum in Japan by
Miyazaki (1971), and oviparae and alate males collected on Artemisia vulgaris in north-west India
were described by Maity & Chakrabarti (1981b). Closely related to
European M. artemisiae, but more
often confused with M. pseudoartemisiae
(q.v.). 2n=12. Macrosiphoniella
zeya Pashchenko Apterae are brown, BL c.1.9-2.0 mm;
immatures are greenish pinky brown. On upper parts of stems of Artemisia
messerschmidtiana in east Siberia (Pashchenko 1998b).
About 120 species with long antennae and legs,
long siphunculi usually with polygonal reticulation on distal 5‑30% (mostly
8‑18% in apterae and 15‑25% in alatae), hairs of medium length,
and little or no dorsal abdominal pigmentation. Several of the well‑known species (rosae, euphorbiae, pallidum)
alternate from Rosa to herbaceous
secondary hosts, but most species are monoecious holocyclic on a wide variety
of herbs and shrubs, with a few on trees,
including subgenus Neocorylobium
which has six species associated with Betulaceae. Males are usually alate.
About half the species are described from North America, although some of
these have seldom or never been recognized again and may really be synonyms
of better known species. About 36
species are known from Europe and the remainder are from central and east
Asia. Three South American species may
also belong in Macrosiphum. Sitobion, often treated as a subgenus of
Macrosiphum, is now regarded as a
separate genus. Accounts of Macrosiphum are available for Europe
(Hille Ris Lambers 1939, Heie 1994), UK and Ireland (Blackman 2010), Germany
(Muller 1969b), Switzerland (Meier 1961, Lampel & Meier 2007), Central
Asia (Nevsky 1929a, Narzikulov & Umarov 1969), Japan (Miyazaki 1971),
Korea (S. Lee et al. 2001b, 2009),
China (Tao 1963) and India (David 1976).
North American Macrosiphum
were reviewed by Palmer (1952 ‑ Rocky Mountain region), Hottes &
Frison (1931 ‑ Illinois), Patch (1919 ‑ eastern USA), and Soliman
(1927 ‑ California).
MacGillivray (1968) and Jensen (1998) gave more recent information on
some North American species, and Jensen (1997) clarified the distinction
between Macrosiphum and Sitobion. Colour photographs of many
western North American species are available at aphidtrek.org. Fern-feeding
species, which seem to form a distinct group within Macrosiphum (or possibly a separate genus with 2n=16, whereas Macrosiphum typically have 2n=10) were
reviewed and keyed by Jensen & Holman (2000). Macrosiphum adianti (Oestlund)
(Fig.43f) Apterae are yellow, greenish or pink; BL
1.0-2.1 mm. On Adiantum spp., esp. A. pedatum, in North America.
Monoecious holocyclic with apterous males. Records from other ferns are
probably due to misidentification (Jensen & Holman 2000). Macrosiphum
aetheocornum Smith &
Knowlton (Fig.30a) Apterae are greenish (see aphidtrek.org); BL c.3.0-3.5 mm.
On Geranium spp., especially G. richardsonii, in western USA. This
species is unusual in having some specimens (but not all) with hairs on
siphunculi (Palmer 1952, BMNH collection, leg. G.F. Knowlton, and aphidtrek.org).
Macrosiphum
agrimoniellum (Cockerell) Apterae are broadly spindle-shaped, light
apple-green with apices of antennal segments and tibiae darker; BL 2.8-3.3
mm. Forming large colonies on flower
stems of Agrimonia eupatoria, and
also recorded from Potentilla sp. (aphidtrek.org).
Widely distributed in North America (New Mexico, Utah, Illinois, New York,
Massachusetts, New Brunswick). Macrosiphum
albertinae Hille Ris
Lambers Apterae are apple-green with
antennae, tibiae and siphunculi mainly dark, and cauda pale green; BL 2.4-2.9
mm. In small numbers on upper sides of leaves of Thesium intermedium in northern Italy, former Yugoslavia (BMNH
collection, leg. V.F. Eastop) and Czech Republic (BMNH collection, leg.
H.L.G. Stroyan), and on Th. divaricatum
in France (BMNH collection, leg. G. Remaudičre). Alatae are undescribed. Macrosiphum
albifrons Essig Lupin
Aphid Apterae are pale
bluish-grey-green, dusted with white wax (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 3.2-5.1 mm. Alatae have a brown pterothorax.
On leaves, stems and flowers of Lupinus
spp., and also recorded from Thermopsis
montana. In North America, and introduced to Europe and South America
(Brazil). Monoecious holocyclic with alate males. See also Blackman &
Eastop (2000). 2n=10. Macrosiphum
alpinum Meier Apterae are pale yellowish green; BL
4.3-4.8 mm. On Senecio alpinus,
feeding on undersides of middle and lower leaves, and also collected from S. fuchsii (= ovatus). Described from Switzerland, and also recorded from Cicerbita alpina in Ukraine (Chumak
2004). Monoecious holocyclic with sexual morphs in October (Lampel &
Meier 2007). Very similar to, and possibly synonymous with, M. polanense. Macrosiphum
amelanchiericolens Patch
Described from Amelanchier
spicata in Maine (Patch 1919), but not recorded since, and the types are
lost (MacGillivray 1968). Apparently a
distinctive species, with numerous secondary rhinaria on ANT III in both
apterae and alatae. Appearance in life
and biology are unknown. Macrosiphum
atragenae Holman Apterae are whitish green with dark
apices to antennal segments, legs and cauda; BL 3.7-4.55 mm. In small groups
on undersides of leaves of Clematis
alpina in the Carpathians (Slovakia, Romania). It is also recorded from C. glauca in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov
2013d). Macrosiphum
audeni Macdougall Apterae are pale green; BL 2.3-2.9 mm. On
upper sides of leaves of Nuphar lutea in
north-western USA (Washington) and Canada (British Columbia). This species is
very similar to M. euphorbiae, but
specimens in the BMNH collection (leg. A.P. Macdougall) have a relatively
longer antennal terminal process and shorter hind tarsus II. Macrosiphum
badium Jensen Apterae are dark reddish brown,
brick-coloured (see aphidtrek.org);
BL 2.3-3.1 mm. On Maianthemum spp.
in western USA. Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and both apterous and
alate males in October (Jensen 2000). Macrosiphum
bisensoriatum Macdougall Apterae are dark green; BL c.3.4 mm. On
undersides of leaves of Ribes lacustre in
British Columbia, Canada. The life cycle is unknown. Macrosiphum
bupleuri Kadyrbekov Apterae are yellow or yellow-green, with
dark tips to siphunculi; BL 2.6-3.6 mm. On inflorescences and undersides of
leaves of Bupleurum aureum in
south-east Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2000). Macrosiphum
californicum (Clarke) Apterae are elongate spindle-shaped, green
with long, yellowish green, dusky-tipped siphunculi, and sometimes with a
longitudinal dorsal stripe of dark green internal pigment (see aphidtrek.org);
BL 1.9-2.6 mm. Alatae are rather pale
and have only 5-10 secondary rhinaria, confined to basal half of ANT
III. On young growth of Salix spp., common and widely
distributed in North America, and also recorded from Honduras (Evans &
Halbert 2007). Monoecious holocyclic;
oviparae and alate males occur in October (Palmer 1952). Possibly there are
two Salix-feeding species being
confused under this name (see aphidtrek.org).
2n=10. Macrosiphum
(Neocorylobium) carpinicolens Patch Apterae are green with dark legs, antennae
and distal parts of siphunculi; BL 1.8-2.6 mm. On young shoots and leaves of Carpinus caroliniana in eastern North
America. Monoecious holocyclic; Hottes
& Frison (1931) described the fundatrix, alatae vivipara, ovipara and
alate male. The sexuales occur in
October. See also MacGillivray (1968). Macrosiphum
centranthi Theobald Apterae are whitish green, yellowish
green or green with darker green spinal stripe, with dark brown eyes (not red
as in euphorbiae), and femora and
siphunculi darker towards apices; BL 2.0-3.6 mm. Alatae have 17-26 secondary
rhinaria on ANT III. On leaves and stems of Valerianaceae (Centranthus, Valeriana), sometimes in mixed colonies with M. rosae, and colonies also occur sporadically on various other
plants. Europe (UK, Switzerland), Turkey (Şenol et al. 2017; requires confirmation), India,
and Africa (Mozambique, Tanzania, South Africa). Indian populations seem more
polyphagous, with records fron Chrysanthemum,
Cineraria, Mangifera, Rosa, Tibouchina,
etc. (David 1976). Monoecious
holocyclic in Europe, with alate males (Meier 1961), probably anholocyclic
elsewhere. 2n=10. Macrosiphum
cerinthiacum Börner Apterae are pale yellow with dark brown
apices to antennae, legs and siphunculi, and dark “knees”; BL c.3.5 mm.
Alatae have c.35-40 secondary rhinaria on ANT III. On undersides of leaves of
Cerinthe minor in France (BMNH
collection, leg. J.H. Martin), Spain, Austria, Czech Republic, Slovakia,
Hungary, Ukraine and Turkey. The life
cycle is unknown. Macrosiphum
cholodkovskyi (Mordvilko) (= Macrosiphum
corallinum Theobald) Apterae are
yellow-green to dark blue-green or vivid coral-pink to red, with femora and
siphunculi dark distally (see
influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 3.1-5.1 mm. Immatures often have a darker
green mid-dorsal stripe. Alatae have 9-28 secondary rhinaria on ANT III. On
upper leaves, stems and inflorescences of Filipendula
ulmaria, and occasionally on Valeriana
spp. In Europe, eastward to Turkey, Iran, west Siberia, Transcaucasus and
Kazakhstan. Monoecious holocyclic, with alate males (Heie 1994). 2n=10. Macrosiphum
chukotense Stekolshchikov
& Khureva Apterae are very
variable in colour, yellow-green
with a dark green spinal stripe, green, purple, reddish purple or red-brown,
with appendages mainly pale; BL 2.4-3.8 mm. On shoot apices, stems and
inflorescences of plants in numerous families; Asteraceae (Arnica, Artemisia, Hieracium, Petasites), Brassicaceae (Arabis, Raphanus), Caryophyllaceae (Dianthus,
Eremogone), Ericaceae (Vaccinium),
Fabaceae (Astragalus), ?Onagraceae
(Epilobium – but possibly this is M. tinctum?), Orobanchaceae (Pedicularis), Polemoniaceae (Polemonium), Polygonaceae (Persicaria), Primulaceae (Cortusa), Ranunculaceae (Anemone, Clematis, Ranunculus),
Rosaceae (Comarum, Rubus), Rubiaceae (Galium, Rubus), Saxifragaceae (Saxifraga)
and Valerianaceae (Valeriana). In
north-east Siberia (Chukotka) and north-west Russia (Nenets, Murmansk,
Krasnoyarsk Krai; Stekolshchikov 2017, Stekolshchikov & Buga 2018,
Stekolshchikov & Khureva 2020). Fundatrices were collected from plants in
five of these families, confirming this species’ polyphagy. Morphologically
it is close to M. euphorbiae, but
there is no host alternation and the life cycle is abbreviated, with oviparae
and alate males in late July-early August (Stekolshchikov & Khureva
2015). There is also a close parallel to M.
valerianae, a similar species in western North America that also lives
without host alternation on a wide variety of host plants. Macrosiphum
claytoniae Jensen Apterae are dark reddish or greenish
brown (see aphidtrek.org); BL
1.8-2.7 mm. Immatures are dusted with purplish or bluish grey wax. On Claytonia spp., especially C. sibirica, in western USA (Colorado, Oregon) and Canada (British Columbia).
Apparently entirely anholocyclic, surviving the winter in mild humid areas
west of the Cascade Mountains (Jensen 2000). 2n=16. Macrosiphum
clematifoliae Shinji Apterae are rather large, spindle-shaped,
pale yellow green to green with a darker blue-green spinal stripe, and black
siphunculi that are pale at their bases; BL 2.8-3.5 mm. On Clematis spp., feeding on both sides
of leaves. In Japan, China, Korea and Taiwan. Monoecious holocyclic in Japan
(Miyazaki 1971). 2n=18 (the karyotype suggests that this species may be a Sitobion). Macrosiphum
clematophagum Zhang, Chen,
Zhong & Li Apterae are green; BL
c. 2.3 mm. On leaves of Clematis
florida in Gansu Province (Xinglongshan mountains, 2200m), China (Zhang
1999). Macrosiphum
clum Jensen Apterae are mid-green (see aphidtrek.org); BL 1.7-2.6 mm. On
leaves and stems of Clematis
ligusticifolia, in low densities and usually in exposed and dry or rocky sites.
In north-west USA (Oregon, Idaho, Washington). Monoecious holocyclic;
oviparae were collected in October (Jensen 2015). Macrosiphum
clydesmithi Robinson (Fig.43g) Apterae are pale green (see aphidtrek.org); BL 1.7-3.0 mm.
Heteroecious holocyclic, migrating from Holodiscus
discolor to Pteridium aquilinum in western North America, from Mexico to
Washington. In western Oregon remigration to Holodiscus occurs in October-November, a few weeks earlier than M. pteridis, which utilises the same
hosts (Jensen & Holman 2000). 2n=16. Macrosiphum
constrictum Patch Colour of apterae in life is unknown, and
BL unrecorded. On Pedicularis sp.
and Saxifraga sp. on St Paul and St
George (Pribilof Islands, Bering Sea). Monoecious holocyclic; oviparae
occurred (on Pedicularis) in June (original description). The
generic position is uncertain. Macrosiphum
corallorhizae Cockerell Apterae are green, with long siphunculi,
blackish in middle and at apices; BL 2.5-3.0 mm. On Corallorhiza spp. in USA (New Mexico) and Canada (British
Columbia; Forbes & Chan 1989). Macrosiphum cornifoliae
(Shinji) Apterae are translucent,
whitish, with banded antennae; BL c. 2.2mm. Alatae are pale yellow-green with
yellow-brown thorax and dusky appendages (Moritsu 1983). On undersides of
leaves of Cornus spp. in Japan and
Korea. Presumably monoecious holocyclic; oviparae were collected in November
(Miyazaki 1971). [An undescribed Macrosiphum
sp. from Cornus stolonifera in
British Columbia, Canada may key out to this species, but is distinct.] 2n=14
(based on 2n male =13; Shinji 1931). Macrosiphum corydalis (Oestlund) Apterae are green, BL not recorded. Very
similar and almost indistinguishable in morphology to M. euphorbiae, but monoecious holocyclic, with apterous males. On
Fumariaceae (Dicentra formosa, Corydalis aurea) in North America; so
far known from British Columbia, Washington, California, Minnesota Wisconsin
and Maine. In late summer it can occur in dense colonies with M. dicentrae on flower stalks of Dicentra (Jensen & Chan 2009). [This species was for many
years known only as alatae, and has been treated in catalogues as a synonym
of Acyrthosiphon pisum.] 2n=10. Macrosiphum
(Neocorylobium) coryli Davis Apterae have reddish brown head and
prothorax, abdomen mainly green suffused with dark brown laterally and
posteriorly, antennae and legs mainly dark, and siphunculi black contrasting
with the pale cauda (Davis 1914, and see influential
points/Gallery); BL 1.6-2.2 mm. On
shoot tips and undersides of young leaves of Corylus americana and C.
cornuta (incl. var california)
in USA (more northerly states) and across Canada. Presumably monoecious holocyclic, but life
cycle and sexuales are apparently unknown. Macrosiphum
(Unisitobion) corylicola Shinji Apterae are dull yellow to yellowish
green, often suffused dorsally with dark brown, antennae, legs and siphunculi
mainly black, cauda dusky; BL 2.5-3.1 mm (Miyazaki 1971). On Corylus
spp. and Carpinus laxiflora in
Japan, east Siberia and Korea (Paik 1972). Biology and sexuales are
unrecorded. Macrosiphum
creelii Davis Apterae are pale green, pink or yellow;
BL 2.3-4.0 mm. On various Leguminosae/Fabaceae (Lathyrus, Lens, Medicago, Phaseolus, Pisum, Vicia) in western North America.
Halfhill (1982) studied its host plant preferences and temperature relations.
Apparently monoecious holocyclic, but males are not yet described. 2n=10. Macrosiphum
cyatheae (Holman) Apterae are pale green, with dark brown
antennae and tibiae; BL 1.6-3.0 mm. Singly or in small colonies on undersides
of fronds of Cyathea balanocarpa and
Pteridium caudatum in Cuba
(original description, as Acyrthosiphon),
and subsequently found on Pteridium in
Venezuela and Costa Rica (Villalobos Muller et al. 2010), and on Pteridium
sp. and unidentified epiphytic ferns in eastern Mexico (Jensen &
Holman 2000). Macrosiphum
cystopteris Robinson Apterae are dark green to greenish black;
BL 2.2-2.5 mm. On undersides of fronds of Cystopteris
bulbifera in USA (Pennsylvania), and also recorded from Cystopteris sp. in Mexico (Jensen
& Holman 2000). Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae in late September
(in USA). Macrosiphum
daphinidis Börner Apterae are pale yellowish or whitish
green with slightly darker spinal stripe, with dark brown eyes (cf. euphorbiae), entirely pale femora, and
siphunculi only slightly darker at apices (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 2.4-4.2 mm. Alatae have 26-47 secondary
rhinaria on ANT III. On Daphne spp.,
especially D. mezereum, forming
small, rather loose colonies on growing buds and shoots, and scattered on
undersides of leaves (Watson 1982). In
Europe, and introduced to north-western North America (Oregon, British
Columbia). Monoecious holocyclic, with
oviparae and alate males (Heie 1994) in September. 2n=10. Macrosiphum
dewsler Jensen Apterae are matte mid-green, paler
marginally and ventrally, with pale brown appendages (see aphidtrek.org); BL 1.8-2.8 mm.
Alatae have 4-9 secondary rhinaria on ANT III. On Linum
lewisii in dry montane forest
regions of western USA (Oregon, New Mexico). Oviparae and alate males were
collected in Oregon in October (Jensen 2017). Macrosiphum
dicentrae Jensen & Chan Apterae are yellowish to mid-green dusted
lightly with wax; BL 2.4-3.8 mm. Alatae have 4-13 secondary rhinaria on ANT
III. Monoecious holocyclic on Fumariaceae, mostly feeding on Dicentra formosa; also found on Dicentra sp., Corydalis scouleri and C.
aurea. In western North America. Oviparae and alate males appear in
September-October (Jensen & Chan 2009). 2n=16. Macrosiphum
diervillae Patch Apterae are milky white with pale
appendages; BL 2.9-3.4 mm. Living
singly on undersides of leaves of Diervilla
lonicera in north-eastern USA and eastern Canada. Monoecious holocyclic;
oviparae and males (immature) were collected in September in New Brunswick
(MacGillivray 1968). Macrosiphum
doronicicola Leclant Apterae are spindle-shaped, green to
greenish white with dark apices to appendages: BL 2.9-4.2 mm. Forming small
colonies on flower stems and flowerheads of Doronicum austriacum in south-west Europe (France, Spain).
Monoecious holocyclic, apparently with an abbreviated parthenogenetic phase;
fundatrices were collected in mid-June, and oviparae and alate males were
present in mid-July (original description). Macrosiphum
dryopteridis (Holman) Apterae are yellowish green to bright or
pale green, sometimes pale yellow or pinkish; BL 1.7-2.4 mm. On various ferns
(Athyrium, Dryopteris, Gymnocarpium, Thelypteris), feeding on undersides
of fronds along veins. In north and central Europe. Monoecious holocyclic
with oviparae and alate males in September-October (original description).
Possibly there are host-specific populations; Müller (1988) found that a
bright green form on Gymnocarpium
dryopteris and a yellowish green form on Athyrium filix-femina bred true in the laboratory, with hybrids
having intermediate colouration. Macrosiphum
dzhibladzeae Barjadze Apterae are yellow with a green spinal
stripe; BL 3.1-3.9 mm. In dense colonies on the stems and undersides of
leaves of Euphorbia macroceras in
Georgia (Barjadze & Gratiashvili
2010). Monoecious holocyclic; oviparae and alate males collected in mid-August
were described by Barjadze et al.
(2018a). Macrosiphum
eastopi Barjadze & Blackman Apterae are pale green with pale cauda
and black-tipped siphunculi; BL 2.8-3.5 mm.
In sparse colonies
on the undersides of leaves and stems of Oberna
multifida, only known from western Georgia. Alate males were found in
mid-August (Barjadze et al. 2017a). Macrosiphum
echinocysti Bartholomew Apterae are forest green, with slight
whitish bloom, head paler, eyes dark red, and with a dark green spinal
stripe; BL 2.4-3.5 mm. On Echinocystis sp.
in California, USA (San Francisco), in large numbers on the undersides of
leaves and dropping readily when disturbed (original description). The author could not find this species
again when he visited the site the following year, and it has not been
collected since. Macrosiphum
edrossi Essig Apterae are pale green, with mainly brown
appendages; BL 2.3-3.3 mm. On Baccharis
latifolia in Peru (Nieto Nafría & Ortego 2018). It was originally
described from an ?Urtica sp., but
these were possibly vagrants. Nieto Nafría & Ortego (2018) provided
redescriptions of apterae and alatae. Probably monoecious holocyclic on Baccharis, but sexual morphs are
unknown. Macrosiphum equiseti (Holman) Apterae are spindle-shaped, uniformly
green or pinkish with apices of appendages dark brown to blackish; BL 1.6-2.6
mm. In small groups on undersides of branches of Equisetum
spp. in Europe and Canada (British Columbia). Monoecious holocyclic on E. sylvaticum in Czech Republic, with
oviparae and apterous males in September (original description). 2n=16.
Macrosiphum
euphorbiae (Thomas) Potato
Aphid Plate 25g Apterae are broadly spindle-shaped, usually
green, sometimes yellowish, pink or magenta, with red eyes, and femora and
siphunculi pale or only slightly darker towards apices (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.7-3.6 mm. Immatures are rather long-bodied,
paler than adults but with a dark spinal stripe, and are dusted with greyish
wax. Alatae are rather pale, with a pale greenish to yellow-brown thorax,
only the antennae
and siphunculi noticeably darker than in apterae,
and have 12-21 secondary rhinaria on ANT III. Of North American origin, now almost
world-wide. Heteroecious holocyclic with a sexual phase on Rosa in north-eastern USA, but
elsewhere probably mainly or entirely anholocyclic on secondary hosts in more
than 20 different plant families. [A very similar undescribed species is
monoecious holocyclic on Oplopanax
horridum in the Cascade Mountains of north-western USA (see aphidtrek.org).]
Raboudi et al. (2011, 2012) studied
the genetic diversity of populations of M.
euphorbiae on different host plants in Tunisia, and Clarke et al. (2017) demonstrated variable
susceptibility to the parasitoid Aphidius
ervi. See also Blackman & Eastop (2000, p.291). 2n=10. Macrosiphum
euphorbiellum Theobald (= M. amygdaloides Theobald; synonymy
established by Watson 1982, and published in Blackman 2010) Apterae are broadly spindle-shaped and
very variable in colour - yellow green, mid green, pink, magenta or wine red
- with black apices to antennae, femora, tibiae and siphunculi (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.5-3.7 mm. On stems and flowerheads of Euphorbia spp. in Europe (southern
England, southern Ireland, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Corsica, Italy and
Turkey), and there is also a record from Washington, USA (Skvarla et al. 2017). Monoecious holocyclic
with red oviparae and red alate males occurring in late September-October (in
Switzerland; Meier 1961). 2n=10. Macrosiphum
fagopyri A.K.Ghosh &
Raychaudhuri Apterae are pale
yellowish with yellowish brown siphunculi; BL 4.2-4.8 mm On young growth and
undersides of leaves of Fagopyrum sp.,
and later recorded from F. cymosum (Raychaudhuri
et al. 1980), in north-east India.
Males possibly of this species were described by David (1976). Macrosiphum
floridae (Ashmead) Apterae are shining pale green, with pale
siphunculi. On Rosa laevigata in
Florida. Macrosiphum
funestum (Macchiati) Apterae are rather dull mid to dark
green, or magenta to reddish brown, with mainly dark antennae and siphunculi (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.9-4.0 mm. On young shoots and leaves of Rubus spp., esp. R. fruticosus s. lat. Throughout Europe, eastward to Moldova,
Turkey and Iran, and also recorded from Canada. Monoecious holocyclic, with alate males; probably
anholocyclic in areas with mild winters. 2n=10. Macrosiphum
fuscicornis Macdougall Apterae are dark olive-green, with red
eyes and uniformly dark tibiae; BL c.3.2 mm. Found on stems and leaf buds of Epilobium angustifolium in Canada
(British Columbia), and apparently not recorded since its original
description. Macrosiphum
garyreed Jensen Apterae are green or brownish pink,
somewhat shiny, with antennal joints and apices of siphunculi and legs dark
brown (see aphidtrek.org); BL
1.9-3.0 mm. Alatae have c.15 secondary rhinaria on ANT III. On stems and
leaves of Geum triflorum in dry
forest regions of western USA (Oregon, Idaho). Sexual morphs occur in early
October, males being apterous (Jensen 2017). Macrosiphum
gaurae (Williams) Apterae are bright green, orange-red or
pink, with dark antennae, mainly dark brown to black siphunculi and a dusky
cauda (see
influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 2.7-3.9 mm. On Gaura and Oenothera spp.,
widely distributed in North America. Oviparae have been collected on Gaura in Oregon in October (aphidtrek.org).
MacGillivray (1968) provided a redescription. Records of the very similar M. pallidum from Onagraceae should
probably all be referred to this species. Macrosiphum
gei (Koch) Apterae are spindle-shaped,
mid-green to bluish green, or mauve
with green mottlings to wine red, with femora and siphunculi dark at apices (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.9-5.4 mm. Alatae have 8-26 secondary
rhinaria on ANT III. On Geum spp.,
especially G. urbanum, where it
forms dense colonies on upper parts of flower stems, and it can also occur on
certain Umbelliferae/Apiaceae (Anthriscus,
Chaerophyllum, Conium, Myrrhis, Torilis), and occasionally on
Caryophyllaceae, usually scattered or in small colonies on the undersides of
the leaves. Dense colonies form on upper parts of stems of G. urbanum during flowering. In Europe, Iran, west Siberia, and
introduced to North America (USA, Canada, Bermuda). Monoecious holocyclic on Geum, with alate males. 2n=10. Macrosiphum
geranii (Oestlund) Apterae have a glaucous appearance due to
a covering of fine white powder; BL of apterae is unrecorded, BL of alatae
2.3-3.3 mm (Oestlund 1887, and BMNH collection, leg. J.O. Pepper). On Geranium maculatum in eastern USA.
Records from western USA may all be referable to M. euphorbiae, and aphids from a cultivated Geranium sp. in Manitoba (Robinson & Bradley 1965) are an
undescribed Macrosiphum species
with shorter siphunculi (BMNH collection, leg. A.G. Robinson). 2n=10. Macrosiphum
glawatz Jensen Apterae are mid-green, pinkish red or red
mottled with green, with siphunculi pale to dusky, darker at apices (see aphidtrek.org); BL 1.8-3.1 mm.
Alatae have 18-35 secondary rhinaria on ANT III. On Potentilla gracilis throughout the growing season, in meadows and
edges of dry forest (Jensen & Rorabaugh 2020). In Oregon and Washington
east of the Cascade Mountains, USA . Unusually for a Macrosiphum, colonies are almost always ant-attended. Probably
monoecious holocyclic, but sexual morphs are still to be found. Macrosiphum
hamiltoni Robinson Apterae are pale green with antennal
joints, tarsi and tips of siphunculi dusky to black; BL 2.2-3.1 mm.
Originally described from specimens collected on Humulus lupulus in Manitoba, Canada, but since collected from Cornus spp. in Manitoba and New
Brunswick. From dates of collection host alternation seems unlikely, so Cornus is probably the usual host.
2n=10. Macrosiphum
hartigi Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are green, with a faint greyish
wax bloom, antennae and legs yellowish brown, with apices of tibiae and tarsi brown, siphunculi green
with black apices, cauda green; BL c.3.6 mm. On Silene vulgaris, feeding on upper parts of flowerstalks and under
leaves (Hille Ris Lambers 1931b, as M.
montanum). In southern Europe (Italy, Austria, Switzerland). Oviparae
(vagrants?) have been recorded in October from Linum alpinum in Switzerland (Lampel & Meier 2007). Macrosiphum
helianthi (Tao) Apterae are yellowish green with
antennae, apices of femora and tibiae, tarsi and whole of siphunculi blackish
brown; BL c. 2.4 mm. Described from specimens collected on Helianthus annuus in Szechuan Province,
China, in 1936, and apparently not recorded since. Macrosiphum
hellebori Theobald & Walton Apterae are yellow-green with darker
marbling, with dark apices to antennal segments, femora, tibiae and
siphunculi (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.7-4.3 mm. On undersides of leaves of Helleborus spp. in Europe, Georgia
(Barjadze et al. 2009), and
introduced to New Zealand, Australia (Valenzuela et al. 2009a) and USA (Washington; Skvarla et al. 2017). Monoecious
holocyclic, with oviparae and alate males in September in continental Europe,
but overwintering mainly as viviparae in UK. Badmin (1991) studied the
population ecology of this species in south-east England. 2n=10. Macrosiphum
holmani Leclant Apterae are green or red, with brown
head, antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda; BL 2.1-3.1 mm. On flower-stalks
and flower-heads of Sanicula europaea in
Europe (Corsica, northern Italy, Czech Republic, Romania). Monoecious
holocyclic, with oviparae and alate males in late August-October (original
description). Macrosiphum
holodisci Jensen Apterae are white (for fundatrix see aphidtrek.org), BL 2.0-3.4 mm.
Monoecious holocyclic on Holodiscus
discolor in north-western USA (Idaho, Oregon). Oviparae and apterous
males occur in September-October (Jensen 2000). Macrosiphum
impatientis Williams Apterae are shining green to dark green with
strikingly black siphunculi (see
influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.7-3.8 mm. In north-eastern and midwestern
USA. Heteroecious holocyclic, migrating from Rosa spp. (multiflora, carolina) to Impatiens spp. (Jensen 1998). Some records of M.
pallidum on Impatiens (e.g.
MacGillivray 1968) may be referable to this species. Records from Turkey
(e.g. Akyurek et al. 2010) are
probably due to misidentification. 2n=10. Macrosiphum
inexspectatum Leclant Apterae are green, similar in colour to
host plant; BL 1.6-3.2 mm. On Euphorbia
insularis, and apparently specific to this host, in Corsica. Monoecious holocyclic with apterous males. Macrosiphum
insularis (Pergande) Apterae
are pale brownish yellow, with appendages mainly pale; BL 2.5-3.4 mm.
On undersides of leaves of Asparagaceae (genera formerly placed in
Comvallariaceae; Maianthemum, Polygonatum, Streptopus) in western
North America (Colorado, Arkansas, Utah, British Columbia and St. Paul
Island). Monoecious holocyclic, with
oviparae and alate males in September (Palmer 1952, as M. yagasogae Hottes; see also Jensen
2000). Macrosiphum (Unisitobion) isodonis (Sorin) Apterae are yellowish green, with broad
lateral longitudinal dark stripes, black antennae, legs and siphunculi, and a
pale cauda; BL 1.9-2.2 mm. Immatures are whitish (Moritsu 1983; as Unisitobion ?corylicola). On undersides of leaves of Isodon japonicus in Japan. Closely related to M. perillae on related hosts in China
and Korea. Macrosiphum
jasmini (Clarke) Apterae are yellowish green, with pale
siphunculi. In small colonies on undersides of leaves of Jasminum sp. in California, USA. Apparently not found since
original description. Macrosiphum
jeanae Robinson Apterae are green with slightly darker
appendages; BL c.1.8-2.0 mm. Feeding inside the pitchers of Sarracenia
purpurea in Manitoba, Canada.
Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae and alate males in September (original
description). A very similar, undescribed species occurs on Darlingtonia californica in California
(BMNH collection, leg. D.W. Nielsen). Macrosiphum
knautiae Holman (= M. silvaticum Meier)
Apterae are yellowish green to grass-green, more rarely pinkish red, with
dark head and thorax and black siphunculi; BL 2.3-3.8 mm. On undersides of
leaves and shoot apices of Knautia spp.
in central and eastern Europe, south to Greece (Papapanagiotou et al. 2012). Monoecious
holocyclic, with oviparae and alate males in October in Czech Republic
(original description). M. silvaticum was
shown to be a synonym by morphological and molecular studies (Rakauskas
2003a, Turčinavičiene & Rakausakas 2009). Buga et al. (2012) studied the
morphological distinction between M.
rosae and M. knautiae on Knautia. Macrosiphum
lambi Robinson Apterae are green: BL 2.3-3.1 mm. Apterae
have 4-45 secondary rhinaria on ANT III, and alatae have 62-106. On Athyrium filix-femina in eastern North
America, and also collected on Thelypteris
confluens (= palustris) in Alaska (BMNH collection, leg. A.G.
Robinson). Macrosiphum
lapponicum Shaposhnikov Apterae are green, yellow or red; BL c.4
mm. Apterae have 37-46 secondary rhinaria on ANT III, alatae are unknown. On Athyrium alpestre (host identity requires
confirmation) in north-west Russia (Khibiny Mountains). Macrosiphum
laseri Holman Apterae are yellow to yellowish green,
sometimes covered with a white waxy secretion; BL 3.1-4.2 mm. On Laser trilobum and Laserpitium
latifolium, mostly feeding on upper part of stem and in inflorescences,
more rarely on undersides of leaves, which turn yellowish. In Crimea, Hungary
(Szelegiewicz 1966a), France (BMNH collection, leg, G. Remaudičre) and Italy
(Barbagallo & Massimino Cocuzza 2014).
Macrosiphum lilii
(Monell) Apterae are red and yellow with dark
siphunculi; BL 2.5-3.2 mm. On Lilium
spp. (and possibly other Liliaceae) in eastern USA. The aphids were described from bulbs imported
from Japan (Comstock 1879), but there have been no subsequent Japanese
records. See also Blackman &
Eastop (2000). Macrosiphum
lisae Heie Apterae are whitish or yellowish white,
with antennae pale except for dark segmental apices, and legs pale; BL
2.5-3.7 mm. On Epilobium angustifolium,
colonising undersides of middle and lower leaves of the smaller plants that
grow in shady places and rarely flower, reproducing vegetatively. In northern
Europe. Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and alate males appearing in
August-September (original description). Macrosiphum
longirostratum Jensen &
Holman Apterae are green with dark
tips to antennae, legs and siphunculi; BL 2.2-2.8 mm. Feeding singly or in
small groups along mid-ribs on undersides of leaves of Woodsia mollis in Mexico. Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae
and alate males in October (Jensen & Holman 2000). Macrosiphum
manitobense Robinson Apterae are pinkish green (see aphidtrek.org) ; BL 2.5-2.8 mm. On Cornus sericea (= stolonifera) in Manitoba, Canada,
and also reported from a Cornus sp.
in western Oregon, USA. Robinson (1965) described all morphs, including
oviparae and alate males in late September, but did not rule out host
alternation, as no specimens were found on Cornus in July-August. The secondary host might be Potentilla, as this species is very
similar to, and could be a synonym of, M.
potentillae (Jensen & Rorabaugh 2020). [Specimens of a Macrosiphum from C. sericea in British Columbia (BMNH collection,
leg. C.K. Chan) appear to be another, undescribed species.] 2n=10. Macrosiphum meixneri Börner Apterae are yellowish green, dusted with
white wax; BL 3.2-4.5 mm. On Euphorbia
sp. (austriaca, hyberna) in Austrian and French Alps,
and in Spain (Cantabrian mountains). Monoecious holocyclic with alate males
(Nieto Nafría & Mier Durante 1991).
Macrosiphum
melampyri Mordvilko Apterae are green with dark distal parts
of antennae , femora, tibiae and siphunculi; BL 3.2-4.0 mm. On Melampyrum spp. in northern Europe (northern England and Scotland
to north-west Russia). It is also recorded from Digitalis ambigua (not D.
purpurea, contrary to Blackman & Eastop 2006). Heie (1994) gave a
redescription. Monoecious holocyclic; oviparae and alate males occur on Melampyrum pratense in Sweden in late
August (BMNH collection, leg. F. Ossiannilsson). A related, undescribed
species was found on Melampyrum sp.
in Pennsylvania, USA (BMNH collection, leg. H.L.G. Stroyan). Macrosiphum
mentzeliae Wilson Apterae are light to mid green with
dorsal reddish patch, or pinkish (see aphidtrek.org); BL 1.8-3.0 mm.
Alatae have 13-21 secondary rhinaria on ANT III. On leaves of Mentzelia spp., in western USA and
Mexico, often in hot situations.
Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and alate males occurring in
October (Palmer 1952) and fundatrices in late March (Jensen & Rorabaugh
2020). Macrosiphum
mertensiae Gillette
& Palmer Colour of apterae in
life is unrecorded; BL 2-3 mm. On leaves of Mertensia, including M.
platyphylla (aphidtrek.org) in western USA. Macrosiphum
miho Jensen & Holman Apterae are pale yellowish green; BL
1.1-2.2 mm. On “Aspidium sp.”
growing in rock walls (Hottes & Frison 1931, as M. adianti), which is probably either Dryopteris marginalis or Polypodium
virginianum (Jensen & Holman 2000). In USA (Illinois, Wisconsin).
Apparently monoecious holocyclic, as fundatrices were collected in May. Macrosiphum
minatii (Das, Raychaudhuri &
Raychaudhuri) Apterae are pale
brown, BL 1.8-4.4 mm. On Delphinium sp.,
with collections also from other unidentified Ranunculaceae, in Himachal
Pradesh, India. Described in Uroleucon,
but transferred to Macrosiphum by
Chakrabarti & Medda (2004). Macrosiphum
mordvilkoi Miyazaki Apterae are green or yellowish green with
shiny black head and prothorax, mainly black antennae and black siphunculi;
BL 2.5-3.8 mm. Apterae have 23-36 secondary rhinaria on ANT III, alatae have
30-40. On undersides of young leaves of Rosa
spp., especially R. rugosa, in east Asia (not usually on
cultivated roses). A record from Turkey (Kaygin et al. 2010) requires further conformation. Monoecious holocyclic
with oviparae in October (original description). Macrosiphum
multipilosum Nevsky Apterae are undescribed. Alatae have pale
green or pale yellow abdomen and brownish thorax, smoky cauda, darker
siphunculi, black antennae and legs; BL c. 2.7 mm. Alatae have c.50 rhin. on
ANT III, and numerous long dorsal body hairs. On stems and undersides of
leaves of Helichrysum punctatum (?
name is untraceable) in southern Kazakhstan. This species has subsequently
been collected on H. maracandicum
(Kadyrbekov 2014d, as Macrosiphoniella
multipilosa; it is more likely to belong in Macrosiphoniella or Uroleucon
than in Macrosiphum). Macrosiphum
nasonovi Mordvilko Apterae are greyish green or red, BL
2.0-3.6 mm. Alatae have a dark brown head and thorax and green abdomen and
7-11 secondary rhinaria on ANT III. Morphologically it is very similar to M. euphorbiae. Recorded from several
genera of Ericaceae (Andromeda,
Chamaedaphne, Oxycoccus, Vaccinium) in northern Europe (Finland, Latvia,
Russia) and France (Pyrenees).
Monoecious holocyclic on Vaccinium
and Andromeda, with oviparae
and alate males in September (Müller
1989). Macrosiphum
nevskyanum MacGillivray Only alatae are described (Nevsky 1929a,
as Macrosiphum crataegi Monell); BL
1.9-2.1 mm. On Crataegus monogyna in
Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2002). Macrosiphum
occidentale (Essig) Apterae are very pale yellow to whitish;
BL 2.6-3.5 mm. On undersides of leaves of Oemleria
cerasiformis, and possibly Prunus
emarginata (see Jensen 2000), in
north-western USA and Canada (British Columbia). Monoecious holocyclic on Oemleria, with alate males (Jensen
2000). 2n=16 Macrosiphum
olmsteadi Robinson Colour of living apterae unknown,
probably pale green; BL 2.6-3.0 mm. Described from Eurybia macrophylla in Ontario, Canada. An aptera identified as
this species on E. conspicua in
Idaho is illustrated by A. Jensen at http://www.flickr.com/photos/sandnine/4749821046/,
who has also collected samples on Eurybia
in the Rocky Mountain parts of Montana, Alberta and Washington. Illinoia (Masonaphis) magna
(Hille Ris Lambers), described from unidentified Compositae in Alberta and
British Columbia, may be a synonym (A. Jensen, pers. comm.). Oviparae and
alate males occur in October (original description). Macrosiphum
opportunisticum Jensen Apterae are medium to dark green,
sometimes pink or reddish (for colour photo go to aphidtrek.org); BL 2.1-3.1 mm.
Alatae have a dark brown head and thorax and dark green or pink abdomen with
paired dark pleural abdominal markings, and 9-17 secondary rhinaria on ANT
III.. This species feeds on a wide range of broad-leaved shrubs, particularly
in montane habitats, in north-western USA and British Columbia. Hosts are
mainly Ericaceae (Menziesia, Azaleastrum, Bryanthus, Pieris, Vaccinium), but it has also been found on Liquidambar, Symphoricarpos, Holodiscus,
Sorbus and Spiraea, and under certain conditions it can even colonise Tsuga (A. Jensen, pers. comm.). The
aphids live dispersed on the host plants and drop readily when disturbed, an
unusually large proportion of individuals being alate. Monoecious holocyclic,
with alate males; all morphs are described by Jensen (2012), who also
discussed the opportunistic feeding on various shrubs by this aphid. 2n=16. Macrosiphum
oredonense Remaudičre Apterae are pale green, with very long
legs, pale except at apices; BL 2.4-4.5 mm. On undersides of leaves, and
later in small compact colonies on stems and young fruits of Lonicera nigra in south, central and
eastern Europe. Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and reddish-brown alate
males produced in August (Müller 1989). Macrosiphum
oregonense Jensen Apterae are shiny green (see aphidtrek.org); BL 2.3-3.7 mm. On
undersides of leaves of Lysichiton
americanum, often in semiaquatic situations. In western North America
(Oregon, Washington, British Columbia). Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae
and alate males in October (Jensen 2000). Macrosiphum
orthocarpus Davidson Apterae are bright pea-green, with black
antennae and siphunculi; BL more than 3 mm. Among flower-spikes of Orthocarpus purpurascens (= Castilleja exserta) in California, USA. Macrosiphum
osmaroniae Wilson Apterae are pale to mid green (see aphidtrek.org); BL 2.7-3.5
mm. On spring growth of Oemleria cerasiformis, migrating in
late April-May to pass the summer in small populations on Pteridium aquilinum (Jensen &
Holman 2000), with a return migration to Oemleria
in September-October. In north-western USA (Oregon, Washington) and Canada (British Columbia).
2n=16*. Macrosiphum
pachysiphon Hille Ris
Lambers Apterae are very pale pink
with stout black siphunculi; BL 3.0-3.5 mm. Alatae have a dusky sclerotic
pattern on the dorsal abdomen. On Rubus
spp. (especially lasiocarpus)
and sometimes on other Rosaceae (Rosa,
Potentilla, Spiraea). Records from
other plants (Berberis, Rumex) are probably of vagrants. In India and Pakistan. A record from Turkey (Şenol et al. 2014c) requires additional
confirmation. The life cycle is unknown.
2n=18. Macrosiphum
paektusani Lee &
Havelka Apterae are green, BL
3.4-4.3 mm. On Rosa spp. in North
Korea (S. Lee et al. 2009). Similar to M. mordvilkoi but with paler head and pale bases to siphunculi.
The life cycle in unknown. Macrosiphum
pallens Hottes & Frison Apterae are pale whitish green, with pale
siphunculi and cauda; BL 1.9-2.4 mm. Alatae are pale yellow-green, without
marginal sclerites. On Silphium
integrifolium in Illinois, USA, with records also from Ambrosia trifida and Aster (=Symphyotrichum) novae-angliae
(the latter from New Brunswick, Canada; aphidtrek.org).
Macrosiphum pallidum (Oestlund) Plate 25h Apterae are green or pink, with antennae,
femoral apices, tibiae, tarsi dark, and siphunculi dark except at bases; BL
2.1-4.6 mm. Apterae have 3-14 secondary rhinaria on ANT III, alatae have
14-22. On wild Rosa spp. and
various other Rosaceae (Agrimonia, Fragaria, Geum, Potentilla), and
also apparently able to colonise a wide range of other plants, although some
records may be misidentifications of other species (e.g. records from Oenothera are probably all M. gaurae). Widespread in North
America. The life cycle still seems to be unknown. MacGillivray (1968)
provided a detailed redescription. A very similar but paler species on Oxalis oregona in Oregon (BMNH
collection, leg. D. Hille Ris Lambers) is undescribed. A record from Turkey
(Akyürek et al. 2010, repeated in Görür
et al. 2012) is based on a
misidentification. 2n=10.
Macrosiphum
parvifolii Richards (Fig.56a,b) Apterae are whitish or pale pink, powdered
with white wax, with dark tips to appendages; BL 2.8-3.4 mm. Alatae are very
pale whitish except for sclerotised parts of head and thorax, with 6-12
secondary rhinaria on ANT III (Jensen 2012). On Vaccinium spp. in British Columbia, Canada (Richards 1967 and
BMNH collection), and in north-western USA (Oregon, Idaho, Montana), where it
is also recorded from Menziesia
ferruginea (Jensen 2012). 2n=16. Macrosiphum
pechumani MacGillivray Apterae are milky white, with black head
and appendages; BL 2.5-3.1 mm. On Asparagaceae (in genera formerly placed in
Convallariaceae; Convallaria majalis,
Maianthemum racemosa) in
north-eastern USA (New York, Washington DC) and Canada (Ontario; BMNH, leg.
M. S˙pkens). Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and
alate males in September–November (original description). Records from plants
in other families (Fragaria, Hibiscus, Pyrola) are likely to be
vagrant individuals, although Leonard (1968) recorded oviparae from Hibiscus. Macrosiphum
penfroense Stroyan Apterae are bright apple green, immatures
have a wax bloom; BL 1.9-3.4 mm. On Silene
uniflora (= maritima) in England and Wales, feeding in
small groups in flowers, or singly on buds or on upper surfaces of leaves.
Apparently anholocyclic, with delayed production of ovipariform apterae under
laboratory conditions (G.W. Watson, unpubl. observations). Described as a
subspecies of M. sileneum (= M. stellariae), but the consistent differences in
morphology and host plant indicate that it should have separate species
status (Watson 1982). 2n=10. Macrosiphum (Unisitobion) perillae (Zhang) Apterae are pale yellow with broad dark
lateral longitudinal stripes, black antennae , legs and siphunculi, and a
pale cauda; BL 1.8-2.9 mm. On upper parts of stems and undersides of leaves
of certain Lamiaceae (Isodon, Mentha, Perilla) in China and Korea. Monoecious holocyclic on Isodon inflexus, with oviparae and
alate males in October (S. Lee et al.
2001b). (A record from Rosa multiflora could
be a misidentification of host plant.)
2n=18 (Chen & Zhang 1985a). Macrosiphum
polanense Pašek Apterae are yellowish white to pale
green; BL 3.8-4.6 mm. In large colonies on flower stems of Cicerbita alpina in Slovakia
(Pol’ana). Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae and alate males in September
(original description). M. alpinum is
possibly a synonym. Macrosiphum
potentillae (Oestlund) Colour of apterae in life is unrecorded;
BL c. 2.2 mm. On undersides of leaves of Potentilla
anserina and Potentilla sp. in
USA (Minnesota, Kansas, Oregon). Macrosiphum
prenanthidis Börner Apterae are green, pinkish or violet
brownish, slightly wax-powdered; BL 3.2-3.8 mm. Apterae have 9-16 secondary
rhinaria on ANT III, alatae have 20-30. On Prenanthes purpurea, in small colonies on stems in spring/summer,
and later on undersides of leaves. In
central and eastern Europe, and recently recorded from northern Italy
(Barbagallo et al. 2011).
Monoecious holocyclic with alate males. Macrosiphum
(Neocorylobium) pseudocoryli
Patch Apterae
are green with antennae, tibiae and siphunculi dusky to dark, especially at
apices (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery);
BL 2.4-3.6 mm (MacGillivray 1968). On
young growth and undersides of leaves of Ostrya
virginiana and Corylus spp. in
north-eastern USA and Ontario, Canada.
Presumably monoecious holocyclic; oviparae were collected in Virginia
in late September (BMNH collection, leg. R.L. Blackman). 2n=10*. Macrosiphum
pseudogeranii Chakrabarti
& Raychaudhuri Colour of apterae
in life is not recorded; BL 2.8-3.5 mm. On Geranium spp. in north-west India (Himachal Pradesh, Uttar
Pradesh). Probably monoecious holocyclic; Raychaudhuri et al. (1980) described the ovipara (from Polygonum – a vagrant?), and Maity & Chakrabarti (1984)
described the alate vivipara and male. Macrosiphum
ptericolens Patch Apterae are pale yellowish green to
darker shiny green, with mainly pale appendages; BL 2.3-3.3 mm. Alatae are
pale green with appendages also mainly pale (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery). Apterae have 3-35 secondary rhinaria on ANT III,
alatae have 27-66. On Pteridium
aquilinum in North America east of the Rocky Mountains, and introduced to
Europe (Lawton & Eastop 1975) and South America (Brazil). Records from
other ferns are probably attributable to other Macrosiphum species (see Jensen & Holman 2000). Monoecious
holocyclic with alate males on Pteridium,
but in the USNM collection there are alatae, oviparae and a male that are
apparently M. ptericolens collected
on Ilex verticillata in
Pennsylvania, suggesting that host-alternation might also occur. Probing
behaviour and stylet penetration were studied by Halarewicz & Gabryś
(2012). 2n=16. Macrosiphum
pteridis Wilson (Fig.43h) Apterae are very pale green; BL 2.5-4.2
mm. Heteroecious holocyclic, migrating from Holodiscus discolor to Pteridium
aquilinum in western USA and Canada (Jensen & Holman 2000). Detailed
descriptions of all morphs occurring on Holodiscus
are given by Forbes & Chan (1993, as Sitobion blackmani). Wilson’s type material included M. clydesmithi, and there is also
confusion in the literature with M.
rhamni (e.g. Robinson 1980). 2n=16. Macrosiphum
pulcherimum (Nevsky) Apterae are bright green, with a slightly
mealy coat, siphunculi and cauda pale green; BL 1.8-2.2 mm. On stems and
leaves of Lactuca saligna and Lactuca
sp. in Central Asia. Macrosiphum
pyrifoliae MacDougall
Apterae, according to the original description, are dusky brown, with
head slightly darker; BL 2.4-3.6 mm.
Described from Pyrus
occidentalis (= Sorbus sitchensis)
in British Columbia, Canada (MacDougall 1926). MacDougall counted 14-17 secondary rhinaria
on ANT III of apterae, but apterae identified as this species from the type
locality (Merritt) in MacDougall's collection have only 3-8 secondary
rhinaria. Aphids believed to be this
species were collected more recently in the Vancouver area, from Sorbus aucuparia and S. sitchensis (BMNH collection, leg.
C.K. Chan). These had green and red
colour morphs (C.K. Chan, pers. comm.). Apparently monoecious holocyclic on Sorbus, although sexuales have not been
described. Very similar to M. euphorbiae. 2n=10, 11 and 12*. Macrosiphum
ranunculi Pašek Apterae are yellowish white to pale
greenish yellow; BL is unrecorded. Described from Ranunculus auricomus in Slovakia, and since recorded from other Ranunculus spp. (Holman 2009).
Monoecious holocyclic (original description). Macrosiphum
raysmithi Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are very pale green to whitish
green, with pale appendages except for tarsi and apices of antennal segments;
BL 3.4-3.7 mm. In large, very compact colonies on undersides of leaves of Lonicera
ledebourii in California, USA.
Macrosiphum
rebecae Jensen & Holman Apterae are green to bright green with
front of head darker; BL 1.8-2.3 mm. On pedicels and along veins on
undersides of fronds of Adiantum sp(p.)
in Mexico. Probably heteroecious holocyclic, migrating to an unknown primary
host (Jensen & Holman 2000). Macrosiphum
rhamni (Clarke) Apterae on undersides of leaves
of Rhamnus in spring are
yellow-green, with a large round patch of reddish internal pigment in the
centre of the dorsum (Essig 1917), and have antennae ringed with black and
pale siphunculi and cauda; BL 1.8-2.4 mm. Fundatrices occur in March on R. purshiana in British Columbia (BMNH
collection, leg. C.K. Chan). Heteroecious
holocyclic; migration occurs to ferns
(Pteridium aquilinum, Polypodium hesperium; Jensen et al. 1993). Apterae on ferns are
pale yellow; BL 1.8-2.6 mm. Colonies on ferns are frequently ant-attended. Gynoparae
and males mature during late September and early October, and after returning
to Rhamnus, can be found until mid-November. Oviparae can be found
abundantly from mid-October to late November (see
aphidtrek.org). In western North America. Closely related to M. clydesmithi but ranging further
west (California) and north (British Columbia). A record from the Netherlands
(Piron 2017, as Sitobion rhamni) requires further confirmation.
2n=16. Macrosiphum
rosae (L.) Plate 25i Apterae are green or deep pink to red-brown
or magenta, with shiny black head and prothorax, bicoloured yellow and black
antennae and legs, black siphunculi and pale yellow cauda (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.7-4.2 mm. On young growth of wild and
cultivated Rosa spp. in spring,
migrating to Dipsacaceae (Dipsacus,
Knautia, Succisa) and Valerianaceae (Centranthus,
Valeriana), and also sometimes in
summer on other plants, especially other Rosaceae (including Pyrus); also some Onagraceae, and
Aquifoliaceae (Ilex). Host
alternation is facultative; colonies can remain on Rosa through the summer, producing some sexuales in autumn, and
anholocyclic overwintering occurs in warmer regions. World-wide, except for
east and south-east Asia; records from Japan apply to M. mordvilkoi. Tomiuk & Wöhrmann (1984) studied genotypic (allozyme) variation in
European populations. A
host-specific parasitoid, Aphidius
rosae Haliday, has ben introduced into Australia as a biological control
agent (Kitt 1996, Kitt & Keller 1998).
See also Blackman & Eastop (2000). 2n=10. Macrosiphum
rubiarctici Heikinheimo Apterae have dark reddish violet head and
thorax, and brownish violet abdomen, with greenish brown spots at bases of
siphunculi, and antennae and siphunculi black except at bases; BL 2.5-3.4 mm.
On flowerstalks of Rubus spp. (arcticus, saxatilis, stellatus) in
Scandinavia, Slovakia and Russia (near Moscow; Holman 2009). The life cycle
is unknown. Macrosiphum
rudbeckiarum (Cockerell) ( = Macrosiphum
cockerelli Hottes) Apterae are
pale green, with mainly pale appendages, somewhat darker in autumn (see aphidtrek.org); BL 2.9-4.2 mm. On
undersides of leaves of Rudbeckia spp.
in western USA. Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae and alate males in
September. Hottes (1949a) gave a very full description. Macrosiphum
salviae Bartholomew Apterae are dark chestnut brown with
black antennae, legs and siphunculi, and usually a central black dorsal
abdominal patch; BL 2.0-2.5 mm. On Lamiaceae (Inga, Salvia, Leonurus, Ocimum, Tetrademia) in
California USA, Cuba, Honduras (Evans & Halbert 2007), Venezuela, El
Salvador, Costa Rica and Puerto Rico (Villalobos Muller et al. 2010). [This species should perhaps be in the genus Sitobion (and the record from Ocimum could be misidentified Sitobion mesosphaeri, which was for some
time regarded as a synonym]. Macrosiphum
schimmelum Jensen Apterae are pale to mid-green, sometimes
pink or yellowish, usually wax-dusted (see aphidtrek.org); BL 2.2-3.7 mm. On
undersides of leaves, and later on flowers and fruits, of Lonicera utahensis in north-western
USA (Idaho, Oregon, Washington) and British Columbia. Possibly also on Symphoricarpus, although the host may
have been misidentified. Monoecious holocyclic, with fundatrices present in May-July
and oviparae and alate males in September (Jensen 2015). Macrosiphum
(Neocorylobium) skurichinae Pashchenko Apterae are brown, with antennae and legs
mainly pale, living on Corylus sieboldiana var. mandshurica in envelopes
of nuts, attended by ants. In east Siberia (Pashchenko 1985). Macrosiphum (Unisitobion) sorbi Matsumura Apterae are pale yellow to yellow-green,
with brown head and variably developed brown spinal and marginal longitudinal
stripes, joined in region of
siphunculi, which are jet black; BL 2.3-3.8 mm. On undersides of
leaves of Sorbaria sorbifolia in
Japan and Korea (S. Lee et al.
2001b). Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and alate males in late October
in Japan (Miyazaki 1971). The host was originally given as Sorbus japonica, but this may have been in error. Macrosiphum
stanleyi Wilson
Apterae are spindle-shaped, green (see
aphidtrek.org);
BL 3.0-4.4 mm. Alatae have brown-black
head and thorax. On leaves and stems
of Sambucus spp. (callicarpa, cerulea, pubens) in
western North America, from Colorado to Alaska. Monoecious holocyclic; oviparae and alate
males occur in August in Colorado (Palmer 1952), but in British Columbia
oviparae are present as early as June (BMNH collection, leg. C.K. Chan). 2n=16*. Macrosiphum
stellariae Theobald (= Macrosiphum
sileneum Theobald) (Fig.51a) Apterae are yellowish green, green or red,
all segments of appendages, including femora and siphunculi, having blackish
apices (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery);
BL 1.8-4.4 mm. In small, loose colonies on young shoots of various Caryophyllaceae (Dianthus, Gypsophila, Moehringia,
Silene, Stellaria), and
sometimes on certain other plants (Papaver, Ranunculus, Valeriana), although pale specimens may easily be confused with M. euphorbiae. In north-western, northern
and central Europe, Georgia (Özdemir & Barjadze 2015), and introduced to Canada (British Columbia) and
New Zealand. 2n=10. Macrosiphum
symphyti Barjadze & Chakvetadze Apterae are yellow or yellowish green
with paler spinal stripe, dark apices to antennal segments, legs and
siphunculi, and a pale cauda; BL 2.6-4.3 mm. Alatae have 18-34 secondary
rhinaria on ANT III. In sparse
colonies on undersides of leaves and stems of Symphytum asperum in
Georgia, and also now identified from Anchusa sp. in Iran (Özdemir &
Barjadze 2015) and Turkey (Şenol et al. 2017).
Monoecious holocyclic with alate males and oviparae collected in early
November (Barjadze & Chakvetadze
2008). Macrosiphum
tenuicauda Bartholomew Apterae are green, BL 1.7-2.6 mm. On Urtica spp. in western North America
(California, Oregon, Colorado, British Columbia). C.-k.
Chan (pers. comm.) was able to rear this species for two years on young
celery plants in the laboratory. 2n=10. Macrosiphum
tiliae (Monell)
Apterae are green or pink, with dark antennae, tibiae and siphunculi;
BL 2.4-2.7 mm Colonies occur on new
growth, especially suckers, of Tilia
americana (Hottes & Frison 1931). Widely distributed in northern
USA. Monoecious holocyclic; oviparae
and alate males occur in September in Wisconsin (Davis 1914). Macrosiphum
timpanogos Knowlton Apterae are pale, BL 4.1-5.0 mm.
Probably collected on “a lupine of some kind” in western USA (Utah). Macrosiphum
tinctum (Walker) (= Macrosiphum
epilobiellum) Apterae are mid to
blue green with a darker spinal stripe (a red form is recorded from
Switzerland), femora entirely pale and siphunculi dusky at apices (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 2.0-4.0 mm. Alatae have11-26 secondary
rhinaria on ANT III. On Epilobium spp.,
especially E. angustifolium and E. montanum, feeding in small numbers
on stems, flower-buds and seed-cases. Widely distributed in Europe.
Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and alate males in late
August-September. 2n=10. Macrosiphum
tolmiea (Essig) Apterae are green with black-tipped
siphunculi (see aphidtrek.org);
BL c. 3 mm. On three spp. of Saxifragaceae, Tolmiea menziesii, Tellima
grandiflora and Mitella caulescens,
near streams or seeps in shady locations, in north-western USA and British
Columbia, Canada. Probably anholocyclic in some areas (Jensen 2000), but
Jensen (2012) found fundatrices on early spring growth of Tolmeia menziesii in a montane habitat
in Washingon. Macrosiphum
tonantzin Peńa-Martínez, Muńoz-Viveros &
Jensen Apterae are pale to bright green, the
abdomen often with a transparent whitish spot in the centre; BL 2.0-2.6 mm.
On growing points and under young leaves of Pittosporum undulatum in Mexico (Jensen et al. 2019). This plant, the only known host, is native to
Australia, so M. tonantzin probably
has one or more Mexican hosts, the long hairy last rostral segment indicating
that these would be likely to have densely hairy leaves. Alate males are
produced in December, but no oviparae, so it is possibly heteroecious with a
sexual phase on another plant. Macrosiphum
trollii Börner Apterae are pale yellowish or pale green;
BL 3.0-4.3 mm. On undersides of leaves and on flowers of Trollius europaeus. In Europe,
with a boreoalpine distribution. Monoecious holocyclic, but males are
undescribed. Macrosiphum
tuberculaceps (Essig) Apterae are yellowish with mainly pale
appendages and dark-tipped siphunculi (see aphidtrek.org); BL 3.5-4.3 mm. On
Achlys triphylla in north-western
USA and British Columbia. Monoecious holocyclic with alate males and oviparae
in October-November (Jensen 2000). Macrosiphum
valerianae (Clarke) (= Macrosiphum
kiowanepum (Hottes)) Apterae are
dark reddish, or greenish with a reddish tinge, pruinose, with very long,
usually dark brown to blackish, antennae, tibiae and siphunculi (see aphidtrek.org); BL 2.1-4.0 mm. A
polyphagous species, colonising leaves and stems of a wide range of host plants, particularly
in mountains and foothills throughout
western USA and Canada. Jensen (2012) established its synonymy with M. kiowanepum (Hottes), and recorded
its occurrence on hosts in nine families of flowering plants; Apiaceae (Lomatium), Asparagaceae (Camassia), Asteraceae (Hymenoxys, Rudbeckia, Taraxacum),
Brassicaceae (Arabis),
Melanthiaceae (Zigadenus),
Onagraceae (Epilobium), Rosaceae (Geum, Potentilla, Rosa),
Scrophulariaceae (Pedicularis, Penstemon) and Valerianaceae (Valeriana). Monoecious holocyclic, and
perhaps utilising various overwintering hosts. Pale specimens do occur and on
slides these are almost indistinguishable from M. euphorbiae (see Jensen 2012). Antolin & Addicott (1988)
studied habitat selection and competition with Aphis varians on Epilobium
angustifolium in Colorado. M.
potentillicaulis Miller, described from Potentilla bakeri in Idaho, is a synonym (Jensen & Rorabaugh
2020). Macrosiphum
vancouveriae Jensen Apterae are very pale green to white with
pale brown eyes (see aphidtrek.org);
BL 2.2-3.8 mm. On Vancouveria hexandra in
north-western USA. The life cycle is uncertain, but probably monoecious
holocyclic on Vancouveria, alate
males and oviparae occurring in October-November (Jensen 2000). Macrosiphum
(Neocorylobium) vandenboschi
(Hille
Ris Lambers) Apterae are pale green, with
black-tipped antennae, legs and siphunculi; BL 2.1-2.2 mm. On Corylus
cornuta var. californica in
California (Hille Ris Lambers 1966; as Corylobium
vandenboschi). Biology and sexual
morphs are unknown. Macrosiphum
venaefuscae Davis Apterae are pale green; BL 2.5-2.8 mm. On
Polygonaceae (Fallopia, Polygonum, Rumex) in eastern North America. Monoecious holocyclic with alate
males; sexual morphs and eggs are found on Rumex (original description). Macrosiphum
verbenae (Thomas) Apterae are bright pea-green with 2-3
darker green longitudinal stripes on abdomen, antennae pale with dusky tips,
eyes black, siphunculi pale, cauda rather short and whitish (original
description); BL is unrecorded (“medium size”). On leaves of a Verbena sp. in Illinois, USA. Since
recorded from Verbena spp. in
numerous states (Smith & Parron 1978), but there are no type specimens
and no further account of this species, and many of these records could be M. euphorbiae. Macrosiphum
vereshtshagini Mordvilko Apterae are green, wax-dusted, with
apices of antenane and siphunculi darker; BL 3.9-4.8 mm. On Cimicifuga foetida (= Actaea cimicifuga) in Russia (Altai region). Macrosiphum
violae Jensen Apterae are very pale green, with pale
brown eyes (see aphidtrek.org);
BL 2.2-3.3 mm. On Viola glabella in
north-western USA. Attempts to transfer to two other Viola spp. were
unsuccessful (Jensen 2000). Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae and alate
males in September-October. Macrosiphum
walkeri Robinson Apterae are variably coloured; yellow,
green, pink or red (see aphidtrek.org);
BL 1.7-3.3 mm. On numerous genera and species of ferns (Adiantum, Asplenium, Athyrium, Cystopteris, Davallia, Dicksonia, Dryopteris, Matteuccia,
Nephrolepis, Osmunda, Pellaea, Polypodium, Polystichum, Woodwardia)
in western North America. Anholocyclic in western Oregon, overwintering on Polypodium and Polystichum, although oviparae (without males) were found on Athyrium. However Jensen (2021) has
now shown that over much of its range M.
walkeri has a sexual phase on Holodiscus,
and has provided decriptions of alate males and oviparae. 2n=16. Macrosiphum
weberi Börner Apterae are usually dark red or dark violet,
with black siphunculi, but a green colour variant occurs in Scotland (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.8-3.0 mm. In small, frequently ant-attended
colonies on stems of Succisa pratensis,
and sometimes also on Scabiosa spp.
Throughout much of Europe, frequently in alpine habitats. Records from Knautia are probably all referable to M. knautiae. Monoecious holocyclic
with alate males. Macrosiphum
willamettense Jensen Apterae are shining pale greenish white,
immatures are slightly waxy (see aphidtrek.org);
BL 2.3-3.5 mm. On young growth of Spiraea
douglasii in north-western USA and Canada (British Columbia, Oregon,
Washington). Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae in October (Jensen 2000).
2n=10. Macrosiphum
wilsoni Jensen Apterae are pale yellowish white (see aphidtrek.org); BL 2.2-3.9 mm. On
Disporum (= Prosartes) spp. in
north-western USA (Oregon, Idaho, Washington) and Canada (British Columbia).
Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and alate males in October (Jensen
2000). Macrosiphum
woodsiae Robinson Apterae are dark green, BL 1.3-2.5 mm.
Described from Woodsia ilvensis in
northern Canada, and subsequently found on other Woodsia spp., Cryptogramma
crispa and Pellaea sp. in
Oregon, USA, perhaps specialising on ferns at high altitudes/latitudes
(Jensen & Holman 2000). Probably monoecious holocyclic on Woodsia. 2n=16. Macrosiphum
zionense Knowlton Apterae are green, yellow or orange with
black antennae, tibiae and siphunculi (see aphidtrek.org); BL c.4.1 mm. On Lupinus sp. and Thermopsis spp. in western USA (Utah, Idaho, Oregon, Washington;
BMNH collection, leg. S. Paulaitis and G.F. Knowlton).
Two east Asian species related
to Uroleucon but with siphunculi
bearing hairs. First tarsal segments all have 5 hairs. Their biology is
hardly known. Macrotrichaphis
rarissima Pashchenko Apterae are dark brown; BL c. 2.3 mm. On
apical leaves of Saussurea sp. in east Siberia. Macrotrichaphis
yatsugatakensis Miyazaki (Fig.13a) Colour of apterae life is unknown; BL
1.9-2.3 mm. Described from an unknown host in Japan, but there are specimens
in the BMNH collection from Artemisia
princeps var. orientalis in Korea
(leg. W.H. Paik).
Three species related
to Lachnus but assocated with
Rosaceae, without any distinct pattern of pigmentation of forewings, and with
dorsal hairs often placed on dark sclerites. The host plant of a fourth
species (Maculolachnus paiki Seo)
is unknown. Maculolachnus
rubi A.K. Ghosh &
Raychaudhuri Apterae are dark brown;
BL 2.7-3.0 mm. On apices of stems of Rubus
sp., attended by ants, in Meghalaya, India. Alatae and sexual morphs are
unknown. Maculolachnus
sijpkensi Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are yellowish brown to dark brown
or blackish; BL 2.4-3.8 mm. On wild Rosa
spp., in sparse colonies on stems near ground, ant-attended. Monoecious holocyclic with apterous males. In
North America and Mongolia, and now also reported from Iran (Mehrparvar &
Lashkari 2021). 2n=10. Maculolachnus
submacula (Walker) Plate 3e Apterae are yellowish brown to dark
chestnut brown (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 2.7-3.8 mm. On stems near ground or (in
summer) on surface roots of wild and cultivated Rosa spp., invariably ant-attended. In summer it has also been
found on roots of Geranium spp. and
Potentilla anserina (Kadyrbekov
2012a). Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae and apterous males in
September-October. The
male genitalia were described and illustrated by Wieczorek et al. (2012). Throughout
Europe, and in south-west and Central Asia, Pakistan and India. Gottschalk
(1989) gave an account of this aphid in Germany. 2n=10.
One North American species with
greatly reduced tarsi and 5-segmented antennae, possibly with host
alternation between Viburnum and
ferns like Shinji in east Asia,
although this needs to be confirmed. Mastopoda
pteridis Oestlund Apterae are yellowish white; BL c. 1.7
mm. On Pteridium aquilinum in
north-eastern USA and Ontario, Canada (Patch 1910a, Robinson 1966). Possibly
heteroecious holocyclic, as also collected from “ant sheds on leaf petioles”
of Viburnum
sp. (Robinson 1966, citing J.O. Pepper). Males are recorded from Pt. aquilinum in September.
About 14 east Asian
species, plus one undescribed from Australia (see below), with long capitate
hairs arising from tubercles, which are often extended into fingerlike
processes. They are associated with Rubus
(except
one species described from Ficus,
which is probably not the true host). However, unusually, Rubus may
be the ancestral secondary host, as
the only species in which the life cycle has been clarified has a sexual
phase on Clethra (the fundatrix
having a very distinctive morphology, see Takahashi 1959). Takahashi &
Sorin (1965) and Miyazaki (1971) keyed the Japanese species, and Lee (2002b)
redescribed and keyed the two species in Korea. Matsumuraja
calorai Calilung
Apterae are brownish yellow; BL 1.1-1.3 mm. On Ficus
ribes var. cuneata in the
Philippines (Calilung 1972). Other
morphs, biology and life cycle are unknown Matsumuraja
capitophoroides Hille Ris
Lambers (Fig.47c,e) Apterae are pale yellow, with antennae
dark at segmental apices; BL 1.3-2.3 mm. On Rubus spp. in Pakistan, Nepal, India and Sri Lanka. According to
Chakrabarti & Banerjee (1993a) there is host alternation between Rubus (as primary host) and Poa annua (as secondary host) in
India, but this seems very unlikely and needs confirmation. As noted by Hille
Ris Lambers (original description), this species differs from the description
of M. formosana only in lengths of
tubercular bases of spinal hairs, which could vary according to environment
or degree of alatiformity. 2n=14. Matsumuraja
formosana Takahashi Apterae are white, with antennae dusky
at segmental apices; BL c.1.8 mm. Alatae are unknown. On Rubus sp. and Fragaria × ananassa in Taiwan (Tao 1963). M. capitophoroides is a possible
synonym (see above). An aptera collected on Duchesnea indica in Fujian province, China (Qiao & Zhang
1999c), and described under the name Chaetosiphon
anguifragum Zhang & Qiao, is
possibly this species. Matsumuraja
hirakurensis Sorin (Fig.47k) Apterae are orange, with antennae dark
except for basal part of III; BL c.1.2-1.3 mm. On Rubus idaeus and Rubus sp.
in Japan. Matsumuraja
nuditerga Hille Ris Lambers Colour of apterae in life is unknown; BL
1.2-1.4 mm. On Rubus sp. in Japan.
There is also a record from ?Pilea sp.
in West Bengal (A.K. Ghosh & Raychudhuri 1972), but the specimens had a
shorter R IV+V and may not be this species. 2n=14. Matsumuraja
rubea Sorin (Fig.47i) Apterae are entirely white; BL c.1.2 mm.
On Rubus sp. in Japan (Takahashi
& Sorin 1965). 2n=14. Matsumuraja
rubi (Matsumura) (Fig.47b) Apterae are pale yellowish or greenish
white; BL 1.0-1.6 mm. On Rubus spp.
in Japan, east Siberia and Korea.
Heteroecious holocyclic, with gynoparae and alate males produced in late
October, returning to unknown primary host (Takahashi 1959c). 2n=14. Matsumuraja
rubicola Takahashi (Fig.47a) Apterae are yellow, with antennae dusky at
segmental apices, BL c. 1.8-2.0 mm. Alatae have a large black dorsal
abdominal patch and secondary rhinaria distributed III 32-36, IV 14-17, V
4-7. On Rubus sp. and Fragaria × ananassa in Taiwan (Tao 1963).
Matsumuraja
rubifoliae Takahashi Plate 20a (Fig.47h,l) Apterae (on Rubus) are yellow or
white, antennae with segmental apices often blackish; BL 1.3-1.7 mm. Alatae
have a black dorsal abdominal patch, black clavate siphunculi and many
secondary rhinaria on ANT II-V. On shoot tips and undersides of young leaves
of Rubus spp. in east Siberia,
China, Thailand, Taiwan, Korea, Japan and Ryukyu. Aphids collected on R. rosifolius in Queensland, Australia
(BMNH collection, leg. V. F. Eastop, 15.vi.89) may also be this species,
although differing by characters given in the key to apterae on Rubus. Heteroecious holocyclic in
Japan (Takahashi 1959c), with sexual phase on Clethra barbinervis; the fundatrix is a very different, much
larger, pale yellow aphid (BL 3-4 mm). Commonly also anholocyclic on
evergreen Rubus in Japan, and
probably elsewhere. Small forms occur on certain Rubus spp. in summer with small dorsal hairs and thicker, more
swollen siphunculi (Takahashi & Sorin 1965). 2n=14. Matsumuraja
rubiphila Takahashi (Fig.47d) Apterae are yellow, with apices of
antennal segments and of siphunculi blackish; BL c. 1.5 mm. On Rubus palmatus in Japan (Takahashi
& Sorin 1965). 2n=14. Matsumuraja
sorini Takahashi (Fig.47g,m) Apterae are whitish yellow with mainly
pale appendages; BL c.1.7-1.8 mm. On Rubus
peltatus in Japan (Takahashi & Sorin 1965). Matsumuraja
taisetsusana Miyazaki (Fig.47j) Apterae are pale yellow, with apices of
antennal segments and of siphunculi dusky; BL 1.6-1.9 mm. On Rubus idaeus var. aculeatissimus in Japan, and on R. sachalinensis and Rubus sp.
in Sakhalin and east Siberia
(Pashchenko 1988a). Matsumuraja sp. (Fig. 47f) Apterae are
yellow-green, BL 1.1-1.6 mm. On Rubus
rosaefolius in Queensland, Australia (BMNH collection, leg. V. F. Eastop,
15.vi.89). A single alata trapped at Galton Research Laboratory, Queensland,
29.iv.87 (BMNH collection, leg. J.Thomas) is probably also this species.
2n=18.
Eight species in Europe and Asia, and one recently
described from New Zealand, with swollen cigar-shaped siphunculi, associated
with Leguminosae/Fabaceae. Regional
accounts are available from north-west Europe (Heie 1995), Japan (Miyazaki
1971), and Korea (S. Lee et al.
2002b). W. Lee et al. (2014)
provided a key to the world species. Kim & Lee (2008b) studied the
molecular systematics of the genus, comparing results of analysis of four
mitochondrial and three nuclear DNA sequences. Megoura
brevipilosa Miyazaki Apterae are of unknown body colour; BL c.
2.6-3.0 mm. Alatae are reddish
vermilion with a little white wax powder dorsally. On Lespedeza spp. in Japan and east Siberia; on L.
bicolor var. japonica it was
found on undersides of old leaves. Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and
alate males in November-December (Sorin & Shinohara 1973). Molecular
study indicates a close relationship to M.
lespedezae (Kim & Lee 2008). Megoura
crassicauda Mordvilko Apterae are green with black head,
prothorax, antennae, siphunculi and cauda; BL 3.0-3.7 mm. Tibiae are variably
pigented. On stems and growing points of Vicia
and Lathyrus spp. in east Asia
(east Siberia, China, Taiwan, Japan, Korea), and recently introduced to
Australia (New South Wales; Hales et al.
2017, Duric et al. 2022). In Korea
it is also recorded from Pisum sativum and
Amphicarpaea edgeworthii. [The name M. japonica (Matsumura) has been used for this species by Chinese
and Japanese authors.] 2n=10. Megoura
dooarsis (A.K. Ghosh &
Raychaudhuri) Apterae are green to
dark green with purplish brown head, and dorsal abdomen with three rows of
roundish or transversely oval whitish wax spots; BL 2.2-2.9 mm. On both
sides of leaves and on twigs of Indigofera
spp., especially I. heterantha, and also recorded from a Hedysarum sp. (plant species name on
label is campanulatum), and Tephrosia purpurea. In India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Kashmir and
Thailand. 2n=20 (Dutta & Gautam 1993). Megoura
lathyricola Lee &
Akimoto Apterae are pale green with
yellowish-brown head, dark antennae and siphunculi, mainly pale legs and a
pale cauda; BL 4.0-4.5 mm. On stems and young leaves of Lathyrus japonicus (ssp. japonicus)
in coastal localities in Japan (W. Lee et
al. 2014). Life cycle is unknown; a clone from Nagasaki reared in
short-day conditions failed to produce sexual morphs so was apparently
anholocyclic. Megoura
lespedezae (Essig &
Kuwana) Plate 25a Apterae are greenish to yellowish with
dark brown antennae, legs dark brown except for distal halves of tibiae,
black siphunculi and yellow cauda (for colour photographs see Sasaki 2019a);
BL 1.8-2.5 mm. On Lespedeza spp. in
China, Taiwan, Thailand, Korea, east Siberia and Japan. Also recorded from Cajanus cajan, Desmodium trifolium (=
triflorum?) and Indigofera teysmanni (= zollingeriana) in India (Raychaudhuri 1984, partly
as Neomegouropsis cajanae), and
from L. thunbergii in Switzerland
(Giacalone & Lampel 1996). L.K. Ghosh (1972b) reported the occurrence of
an ovipara in West Bengal (as M.
cajanae). 2n=14. Megoura
litoralis Müller Apterae are pale green with brownish head
and prothorax and appendages, and darker brown siphunculi; BL 3.0-4.4 mm. On
young growth, flowers and fruits of Lathyrus
japonicus ssp. maritimus in
north-west and north Europe (not UK). Monoecious holocyclic with alate males
(Heie 1995). Rakauskas et al. (2008) reviewed its
distribution and habitat. Megoura
nigra Lee Apterae are dark reddish brown; BL 3.1-4.3
mm. On young stems and undersides of leaves of Vicia
venosa in South Korea. Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae and alate
males in mid-October (Lee et al.
2002b). A record from Turkey (Akyürek et al. 2019) requires further
confirmation. Megoura
stufkensi Eastop Apterae are green with appendages mainly
pale, the antennae and siphunculi darker towards apices; BL 1.6-2.0 mm.
Alatae are unusual in having only 0-1 secondary rhinaria on ANT III, and
dark-veined forewings with the media only once-branched. On Carmichaelia spp. in New Zealand,
feeding on plant stems deep within bushes (Eastop 2011). The life cycle and
sexual morphs are unknown. This is the only apparently indigenous species of
Macrosiphini in New Zealand, and has unique features, but DNA data indicate
that it has closest affinity with this genus (Teulon et al. 2013). Megoura
viciae Buckton Plate 25b Apterae are dark bluish green to apple-green
with black head, prothorax, antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 3.0-5.0 mm.
On young apical parts of stems of Leguminosae/Fabaceae, especially Lathyrus and Vicia spp. In Europe, Middle East, north and Central Asia, and
Ethiopia. Some Asian populations have been given subspecies status (M. viciae ssp. abchasica Mordvilko, M.
viciae ssp. turanica Nevsky),
but with little apparent justification. Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae
and alate males in August-September. Studies on this aphid included the
classic work on photoperiodism and morph determination by Lees (1973), and
the first characterisation of an aphid sex pheromone (Dawson et al. 1987). See also Blackman &
Eastop (2000). 2n=10.
Two species related to Megoura but with longer siphunculi, a
dorsal pattern of dark spinal, pleural and marginal sclerites in both apterae
and alatae, and a habit of living on basal parts of their host plants.
Blackman (2010) reviewed the genus. Megourella
purpurea Hille Ris Lambers Plate 25c Apterae are dirty reddish violet, pink or
greenish, with black dorsal spots (see
influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 2.1-2.9 mm. On Lathyrus pratensis, on basal parts at or near ground level. In
north-west, northern, central and southern Europe, and also reported from
Iran (Rezwani 2010). Monoecious holocyclic; oviparae and apterous males have
been reared in October in the Netherlands (Hille Ris Lambers 1949). Megourella
tribulis (Walker) Apterae are dark green to black with
black antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 2.4-3.0 mm. On Vicia sepium, feeding on base of stem at or near ground level. In
north-west, northern and central Europe. Monoecious holocyclic; sexual morphs
were found in late September-October in the Netherlands (Hille Ris Lambers
1949).
A genus for one western North
American species superficially similar to Megourella
but perhaps more closely related to nearctic Nasonovia (Kakimia),
with 4-5 hairs on first tarsal segments and long, somewhat capitate hairs,
the marginal ones being placed on unusual domed sclerites (Hille Ris Lambers
1974b). Megourina
lagacei Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are of unknown body colour; BL
2.5-3.0 mm. Alatae have black head and
thorax, 47-55 secondary rhinaria on ANT III, and dark (not bordered) wing
veins. On Aquilegia formosa in
California. Biology and sexual morphs are unknown.
A genus for one east Asian Macrosiphum-like species with an
unusual pattern of dorsal sclerotisation and 4 hairs (including 2 sense pegs)
on all first tarsal segments (Miyazaki 1971). [A second species described in
this genus, M. longqishanense Zhang
& Qiao (in Qiao & Zhang 1999c, 1999d), seems to be based on vagrant
individuals of a Uroleucon sp.] Meguroleucon
codonopsicola Miyazaki Apterae are yellowish green with a milky
tint, with brown head, black antennae and siphuculi, very large black
postsiphuncular sclerites, and a pale cauda; BL 2.2-2.6 mm. Alatae have 37-44 secondary rhinaria on ANT
III. On Codonopsis spp. in Japan and Korea (Lee et al. 2002c), living on stems and
undersides of young leaves without causing any deformation. In Korea it has
also been collected on Platycodon
grandiflorum. Biology and
sexual morphs are unknown.
Two or three little-known east
Asian species with an elongate pterostigma tapering around curve of wing as
in Schlechtendalia,
but having 6-segmented antennae and galls with exit located at base. Meitanaphis
elongallis Tsai & Tang
Galls are jujube-like in form, maximally 4.1 cm long, green, becoming
red or purplish when mature with many fine longitudinal ridges. On undersides
of leaflets of Rhus punjabensis
var. sinica in China (Tsai &
Tang 1946). Alatae (BL c. 1.3 mm) emerge through a large slit in autumn. The
life cycle is unknown. Meitanaphis
flavogallis Tang
Galls are pea-like to jujube-like in form with yellow hairs, on undersides
of leaflets of Rhus punjabensis
var. sinica in China (pictured in
C. Zhang et al. 2008). The
description of this species has not been seen, but the antennal rhinariation
was described by Yang et al.
(2009). The morphology of the antennal rhinaria and DNA analyses (Yang et al. 2010; Ren et al. 2017, 2019) all indicate that it may be more correctly
placed in Kaburagia. Meitanaphis microgallis
Xiang Galls are small, papilliform, on
Rhus potaninii in China (Xiang
1980/81). In the DNA analysis of Yang et
al. (2010) this species clustered with Kaburagia, but a misidentification may be involved as this does
not accord with the original description of the forewing having an elongate
pterostigma tapering around its tip.
About
25 palaearctic species with short
siphunculi, closely related to Rhopalosiphum,
and with the same association with Rosaceae (Pyroidea) and Poaceae, although
only a few species have proven host alternation. Alatae have dark forewing veins with media
twice-branched. Three species are European, but most of the remainder are
native to east Asia and associated either with Miscanthus, or with Arundinaria
and related bamboos. The taxonomy of the east Asian species is in need of
further study. Accounts are available for the Iberian peninsula (Nieto Nafría
et al. 2005a), Japan (Sorin 1970b),
China (L. Zhang et al. 2001),
Taiwan (Liao 1976), India (Raychaudhuri & Banerjee 1974, A.K. Ghosh &
L.K. Ghosh 2006) and north-east India (Raychaudhuri et al. 1980b). Halbert
& Remaudičre (2000) compared species in the miscanthi/sacchari group. Melanaphis
arthraxonophaga Zhang, Qiao
& Zhang Colour of apterae in
life is unknown; BL c. 1.1 mm. On Arthraxon
hispidus in China (Liaoning Province; L. Zhang et al. 2001). Melanaphis arundinariae
(Tissot) Apterae are yellowish-brown with darker brown head and sides of
body; BL c. 1.6mm. Dense colonies were found in April on Arundinaria gigantea ssp. tecta
in Florida, USA (Tissot 1933). The life cycle is unknown. [This species,
known only from the type series, was for many years placed in Rhopalosiphum but was transferred to Melanaphis by Skvarla et al. (2019).] Melanaphis
bambusae (Fullaway)
Apterae on bamboos are dark brown to black with waxy grey dorsal abdominal
markings, legs and antennae mainly pale; BL 0.8-1.4 mm. Alatae (on bamboos) have secondary rhinaria
distributed III 14-28, IV 7-15, V 0-7. Host-alternating in Japan between Photinia villosa and bamboos (Sorin
1962); elsewhere (and also commonly in Japan) populations are anholocyclic on
bamboos (Arundinaria, Bambusa, Phyllostachys).
Ant-attended. Indigenous to east Asia, now in south-east Asia,
Australia, India, the Mediterranean area and southern Europe (Egypt, Turkey,
Morocco, France, Italy, Greece, Spain, Portugal, Madeira), USA (Louisiana,
Hawaii), and a population has been found on Phyllostachys vivax in UK under glass (R. Hammon, pers.
comm.). Yi & Su (1985) studied
predation by a coccinellid in China.
2n=8, 10 or 12 (the reason for the discrepancy needs further
investigation). Melanaphis
daisenensis (Sorin) Apterae are blackish, with yellow
antennae and tibiae and black tarsi: BL c.1.5-1.6 mm. On Miscanthus sp. in Japan. Very closely related to, and possibly
not distinct from, M. miscanthi. Melanaphis
donacis (Passerini) Apterae in life are dark brown with an
extensive and distinctive pattern of white wax (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery
and aphids of
Karnataka website); BL 1.5-2.2 mm. Alatae have
secondary rhinaria distributed III 3-13, IV 0-3, V 0. On Arundo
donax, and also recorded from Phragmites
spp. Attended by ants. In southern Europe, the Mediterranean region, Azores,
Madeira, Canaries, north Africa, Middle East, Central Asia, eastward to India
and Pakistan and introduced to Argentina and Chile (Ortego et al. 2004). Monoecious holocyclic on
Arundo in southern France, with
apterous males (BMNH collection), but commonly also anholocyclic. 2n=8. Melanaphis
elizabethae (Ossiannilsson) Apterae are dark brown, slightly
wax-powdered; BL 2.0-2.7 mm. In inflorescences and under leaves of Phragmites australis (= communis). In northern Europe
(Scotland, Denmark, Sweden, Finland - Heikinheimo 1997). Monoecious
holocyclic (Heie 1986). Melanaphis
graminisucta Zhang Apterae are reddish brown; BL 1.5-1.8 mm.
On an unidentified grass species in Hunan Province, China. Melanaphis
indosacchari (David) Apterae are dull dark brown; BL 1.1-1.5
mm. In ant-attended colonies on exposed upper leaves of Saccharum officinarum in south India, and also sometimes on Iseilema laxum. Some specimens in mixed
populations with M. sacchari on Echinochloa colonum in the Philippines
(BMNH collection, leg. M.R. Gavarra) seem also to be M. indosacchari (or M.
sorini, if the two are indeed distinct species). Varma et al. (1978) studied its ecology and
control measures in India. Melanaphis
jamatonica (Sorin) Colour of apterae in life is unknown; BL
1.3-1.8 mm. On Miscanthus sp. in
Japan. Specimens from Miscanthus
sinensis in Korea (BMNH collection, leg W.H. Paik) will also key to jamatonica, but differ from the Japanese material by lacking scent glands on
the hind tibiae. Melanaphis japonica (Takahashi) Apterae are yellow or purple, dusted with
wax (Moritsu 1983); BL 1.3-1.6 mm. On Miscanthus
sinensis in Japan, and also recorded from Korea (Lee et al. 2002c – but these specimens might be M. jamatonica. Oviparae and alate males occur in September, and
eggs are laid on undersides of leaves (Sorin 1970b). 2n = c.22.
Melanaphis
koreana (Sorin) Apterae are pale yellowish grey; BL
1.5-1.8 mm. Alatae were described by W.K. Lee & Seo (1992). On Miscanthus sinensis in Korea and east
Siberia (Pashchenko 1988a). [Specimens in the BMNH collection, determined by
Sorin as M. koreana (leg. W.H.
Paik, Yangi, Korea, 11.vi.61), have shorter siphunculi than the type material
(1.0-1.1 × longer than basal width, compared with c.1.45 × basal width)] . Melanaphis
luzulella (Hille Ris Lambers) Apterae are dark green, almost black; BL
1.2-1.8 mm. On Luzula spp., in
spring and early summer at stem bases and on upper surfaces of basal parts of
leaves, tented over by ants, and later also onto aerial shoots. In northern,
central and eastern Europe. Monoecious holocyclic with apterous males (Heie
1986). Prior (1971) described the ovipara. Melanaphis
meghalayensis Raychaudhuri & Banerjee Apterae are greenish to dark brown, often
dusted with wax; BL 1.3-1.9 mm. Alatae
have secondary rhinaria distributed III 18-20, IV 4-8. On undersurfaces of
leaves, or on stems at ground level, of unidentified grasses and bamboos in
Meghalaya and West Bengal, India (Raychaudhuri & Banerjee 1974). A population described as a subspecies, M. meghalayensis bengalensis, with
fewer hairs on the cauda and genital plate, was recorded from Arundinaria sp. in West Bengal. The life cycle has not been studied. Agarwala & Mahapatra (1990) described
oviparae of M. meghalayensis from
an unidentified bamboo, indicating that this species may be partly holocyclic
and monoecious on Poaceae. However it
is not clearly differentiated morphologically from the secondary host form of
M. pahanensis. M. grossisiphonellus Zhang, Qiao & Zhang, described from a Bambusa sp. in China (L. Zhang et al. 2001), is possibly this
species. Melanaphis
miscanthi (Takahashi) Apterae are yellowish grey, dirty yellow
or dark purple; BL 1.2-1.9 mm. On Miscanthus
sp. in Taiwan. This species was redescribed by Halbert & Remaudičre
(2000). Melanaphis montana (Sorin) Apterae are greenish dark brown (but see
also Moritsu 1983, p.184); BL c.1.2-1.3 mm. On Miscanthus sinensis in Japan, and also found on Leersia in Thailand (BMNH collection,
leg. Napompeth). Very close to, and possibly synonymous with, M. tateyamaensis.
Melanaphis
pahanensis (Takahashi)
Host-alternating between Pyrus
spp. and unidentified Poaceae in northern India (Raychaudhuri & Banerjee
1974, Medda & Chakrabarti 1992).
Apterae on Pyrus in spring
are dark brown dusted with wax; BL 1.8-2.1 mm. They feed on the undersides of the leaves, causing them to
curl. Alatae emigrating from Pyrus have secondary rhinaria
distrubuted III 15-28, IV 0-1; return migrants (gynoparae) have them
distributed III 51-58, IV 18-28, V 12-15, VI 0-3 (Medda & Chakrabarti
1992). It was originally described (Takahashi 1950, as Aphis pahanensis) from Malaya, as brownish purple apterae
secreting cottony wax, BL c.1.25 mm, on an unidentified bamboo of the Arundinaria group, and has
subsequently been found on Pennisetum
purpureum (BMNH collection, leg. S.K. David). Swirskiaphis bambuciepula Zhang & Zhang, described from Phyllostachys in China (L. Zhang &
G. Zhang 2000c) is possibly this species. [Melanaphis pyrisucta Zhang & Qiao, described from Pyrus pyrifolia in China (G. Zhang et al. 1999d) is similarly
long-haired, but alate spring migrants have many more rhinaria (III 31-37, IV
9-12, V 2-6).] Melanaphis
pyraria (Passerini)
Pear‑Grass Aphid Apterae on Pyrus are dark brown, with an extensive brown-black dorsal
abdominal patch (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery);
BL 1.3-2.1 mm. In spring on undersides
of pear leaves, rolling the leaves transversely or diagonally to the mid-rib,
attended by ants (Andrasfalvy 1968).
Host-alternating between Pyrus
communis and Poaceae. Spring migrant alatae have secondary rhinaria
distributed III 8-30, IV 0-9, V 0-2. Apterae on grasses are yellowish to
reddish purple; BL 1.1-1.7 mm. Their colour differs according to host species
and condition; on Arrhenatherum it
is reddish purple, hidden under deformed leaves, while on Poa, Brachypodium and Triticum
it is a smaller, yellowish aphid. Alatae produced on grasses have secondary
rhinaria distributed III 23-45, IV 12-29, V 1-21 . Widely distributed in
Europe, in Madeira, the Canaries and the Azores, Mediterranean region
and Middle East, Caucasus and
Transcaucasia. 2n=8 (the chromosomal distribution of heterochromatin and rDNA
was studied by Criniti et al.
2004). Melanaphis sacchari (Zehntner) (= formosana Takahashi 1921, 1931 nec. Sorin, 1970) Apterae are very variable in colour according to host plant and environmental conditions; pale yellow, yellow brown, dark brown, purple, or even pinkish, often with a variably developed black dorsal patch (e.g. see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.1 ‑2.0 mm. Alatae have secondary rhinaria distributed III 4-16, IV 0(-6), V 0. In ant-attended colonies on Poaceae, especially Saccharum; also sometimes on other grasses and cereals (Arthraxon, Echinochloa, Oryza, Oryzopsis, Panicum, Pennisetum, Sorghum, Themeda, Thysanolaema), and there are also records from Araceae (Arum, Caladium). In South Africa, India, Sri Lanka, Laos, China, Philippines, Australia, Hawaii, USA, Central and South America. Probably anholocyclic almost everywhere that it occurs, but it is reported to be monoecious holocyclic (with alate males) in China (Zhang & Zhong 1983), with Miscanthus sacchariflorus as the overwintering host (Wang et al. 1961). Peńa Martinez et al. (2016) have now reported sexual morphs in introduced populations of the M. sacchari/sorghi group on three sorghum species in Mexico. It still needs to be determined whether these populations are M. sacchari or M. sorghi (see below). Zimmerman (1948) gave a general account of the biology, including natural control by parasites and predators, in Hawaii. Most of the ecological studies of M. sacchari on cultivated sorghum in Africa and Asia should probably be referred to M. sorghi (q.v.). Nibouche et al. (2014) studied genetic diversity of samples identified as M . sacchari from many parts of the world, and showed that certain genotypes have a wide distribution, but their multilocus genotypes “A” and “E” originating from Africa and Asia showed greatest genetic divergence from the rest and were almost all collected from Sorghum bicolor; further studies combining molecular and morphological data have now shown these to be M. sorghi (Nibouche et al. 2021). In the USA, populations identified as M. sacchari which prior to 2013 were limited to sugarcane in Florida and Louisiana, have recently become a major problem on cultivated sorghum in many south-eastern and central states (Medina et al. 2017; Nibouche et al. 2018), and this has now been shown to be due to the separate introduction of M. sorghi (Nibouche et al. 2021). Holt et al. (2020) have found differences between the microbiota of sugarcane and sorghum-feeding populations in the USA. The M. sacchari/sorghi/miscanthi group is closely related to the host‑alternating M. pyraria in Europe. 2n = 8 for samples from Hong Kong and India; but Khuda-Bukhsh & Kar (1990) recorded 2n=10 from India. [A record of 2n=22 for M. sacchari in Japan (Blackman 1986) is referable to another, undescribed species.] Melanaphis
siphonella (Essig & Kuwana) Apterae are dark brown, lightly dusted with
white wax; BL 1.4-1.9 mm. On Pyrus spp. (betulifolia, pyrifolia) in Japan (Essig & Kuwana 1918), Korea
(Paik 1965) and China (L. Zhang et al.
2001). Biology and life cycle are
unknown. Melanaphis sorghi (Theobald) Plate 8f Apterae are white or yellow, and sometimes larger individuals have a variably-developed black dorsal abdominal patch (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.1-2.0 mm. Alatae have secondary rhinaria distributed III 4-13, IV 0(-1), V 0. On Poaceae, especially Sorghum bicolor, favouring the axils of the lower leaves, but large colonies extend over the whole leaf. Also sometimes on other grasses or cereals (Eleusine, Panicum, Saccharum, Zea). M. sorghi occurs in Greece (Margaritopoulos et al. 2013), Cyprus, Israel, Iran (Eastop & Hodjat 1981, as M. sacchari), probably in Turkey (Kök & Özdemir 2021, as M. sacchari), and is widely distributed in Africa, east and south-east Asia (India, Pakistan, China, Thailand, Japan, Philippines). It has now been shown to be the species now attacking cultivated sorghum in the southern USA and Mexico (Nibouche et al. 2021, and see above under M. sacchari). Probably it is mostly anholocyclic, although Setokuchi (1975) reported a holocycle on Sorghum in Japan, and David (1977) recorded oviparae in February-March in north-west India. It is also likely that the introduced populations producing sexuales on Sorghum spp. in Mexico (Peńa Martinez et al. 2016) are M. sorghi. 2n=8. Melanaphis sorini Halbert & Remaudičre (= formosana
Sorin 1970, not Takahashi 1921, 1931)
Apterae are wine red, purple or tan; BL 1.0-1.8 mm. On Miscanthus spp. in Japan and Taiwan,
and introduced to USA (Florida, California; Halbert & Remaudičre 2000).
It has also been found in UK on Miscanthus
imported from Israel (Hammon et al.
2006). Monoecious holocyclic in Japan, with alate males (Sorin 1970b, as Longiunguis formosanus); the Florida
population may be anholocyclic. This species seems closely related to and
morphologically almost indistinguishable from M. indosacchari, but the form introduced into Florida would not
colonise Saccharum in laboratory
tests (Halbert & Remaudičre 2000).
Melanaphis
strobilanthi Medda &
Chakrabarti Colour of apterae in
life is unrecorded, probably pale with darker head; BL 1.2-1.6 mm. On Strobilanthes sp. in Uttar Pradesh,
India. Melanaphis takahashii Skvarla
& Miller (replacement name for Aphis
arundinariae Takahashi; Skvarla et
al. 2019) Apterae are purplish
brown (Liao 1976); BL 1.2-1.7 mm.
Alatae have numerous secondary rhinaria distributed III 26-38, IV
14-29, V 7-19. On undersides of leaves of bamboos of the Arundinaria group (Pleioblastus,
Yushania niitakayamensis) at high
altitude in Taiwan. The life cycle is
unknown. Specimens from India
described as M. arundinariae (e.g.
Raychaudhuri & Banerjee 1974) have apterae with 6-segmented antennae and
several other differences from the Taiwanese species, and are more likely to
be the secondary host forms of M.
pahanensis. Reports of Pyrus pashia
as the primary host of this species, (e.g. Chakrabarti & Banerjee
1993b, Saha & Chakrabarti 1988d, as M.
arundinariae) are also likely to be referable to M. pahanensis. Other long-haired Melanaphis from northern India, but with shorter siphunculi, have
been described as a distinct species, M.
meghalayensis (q.v.). Melanaphis tateyamaensis (Sorin) Apterae are reddish purple; BL c. 1.6 mm.
On undersides of leaves of Miscanthus
sp. in Japan. Possibly these are larger specimens of M. montana.
Melanaphis
yasumatsui (Sorin) Apterae are dark purple, with white
powdery wax; BL 1.2-1.5 mm. On Miscanthus
sp. in Japan, and recorded from M.
sinensis in east Siberia (Pashchenko 1988a). Melanaphis
zhanhuaensis Zhang, Qiao
& Zhang Apterae are purplish
red; BL c.1.5 mm. On subterranean part of
Imperata cylindrica var. major in China (Shandong Province; L.
Zhang et al. 2001). Apart from the
colour and subterranean habit this species seems indistinguishable from M. sorghi.
One nearctic species near Tinocallis, but with differences in
the ventral structure of the head, dark marginal sclerites on abdominal
tergites 5-7, a squat body shape, infuscated basal parts of wings and a host
association with Juglandaceae. It was placed as a synonym of Tinocallis by Remaudičre &
Remaudičre (1997) but revalidated as a full genus by Quednau (2003). Melanocallis
caryaefoliae (Davis) (fig. 33A)
All
viviparae are alate, squat-bodied, very dark green to black with small tufts
of white wax and conspicuous paired black dorsal tubercles, those on
abdominal tergite 2 being especially large; BL 0.9-1.9 mm. On both upper and lower sides of leaves of
most Carya spp., but especially C. illinoiensis. Feeding causes yellow spots on leaves,
reducing photosynthesis (Wood & Tedders 1986), and large populations can
cause defoliation. Apterous oviparae and alate males are produced in October
(Hottes & Frison 1931, as M.
fumipenella); the ovipara is illustrated by Quednau (2003). The effect of
M. caryaefoliae on the yield of
pecans was studied by Wood et al.
(1987), and Dutcher (1985) evaluated chemical control measures. For a general account see Bissell
(1978). 2n=14.
Three
or possible more nearctic species related to the east Asian genera of Fordini
of subtribe Melaphidina (Nurudea, Kaburagia, Schlechtendalia), and with a similar alternation between Rhus and mosses. A recent study using both morphological and
mtDNA data placed it closest to Schlechtendalia
(Pang et al. 2011; although see
also Ren et al. 2017). The
antiquity of the host association was discussed by Moran (1989). Foottit
& Maw (2017) have now shown using a combination of molecular and
morphological data that at least three cryptic species in North America have
been confused under the name Melaphis
rhois, and describe as a new species one group of populations that can be
discriminated morphologically from M.
rhois. Melaphis
asafitchi Foottit & Maw
Forming sac-like white or green galls (when immature – becoming red
when mature) on Rhus spp. similar
to those of M. rhois, in eastern
Canada and north-eastern USA (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery) .
The length of the ultimate rostral segment (RIV+V) of adult apterae in the
galls is less than 0.067 mm. Migration occurs to unidentified mosses. Foottit
& Maw (2017) provided more complex functions to discriminate most
individuals of generations on Rhus
from M. rhois, but a definitive
diagnosis is only possible using mitochondrial COI-5P sequence. Moss-feeding
populations cannot currently be discriminated from those of M.
rhois. Melaphis
rhois (Fitch)
Forming closed, sac-like white or green galls (when immature –
becoming red when mature; fig. 129,
and see influentialpoints.com/Gallery)
on leaflets of Rhus spp. (glabra, typhina) in North America. The length of the ultimate rostral
segment (RIV+V) of adult apterae in the galls is more than 0.067 mm (cf. M. asafitchi). Emigrant alatae (BL
1.4-1.7 mm) emerge in late August-October and fly to mosses. Apterae
on mosses are pale with darker antennae and legs; BL 0.8-1.2 mm; a detailed
redescription of them was provided by Pike et al. (2012; but this could possibly apply to M. asafitchi). Anholocyclic
populations also occur all-year-round on mosses, and have been introduced
into Europe (Sweden, UK), although following the work of Foottit & Maw
(2017) the specific identity of these European populations is uncertain.
Hebert et al. (1991) studied
genetic variation in local populations in Ontario, Canada by enzyme
electrophoresis, and found two groups differing in allele frequency profiles,
which perhaps correspond to the two species recognised by Foottit & Maw
(2017). The complete mitochondrial
genome has been published (Ren & Wen 2017; although it is unclear whether
this is M. rhois or M. asafitchii (or an undescribed
species). 2n=26*.
One western Australian species with 6-segmented antennae,
long dorsal body hairs arising from low tuberculate bases, and siphunculi
with hairs on basal half as well as subapically. Alatae have forewings with
twice-branched media.
Meringosiphon
paradisicum Carver Apterae are probably brownish; BL
1.55-1.76 mm. The host plant is uncertain; the type specimens were swept from
areas where Daviesia divaricata was
the dominant vegetation (Carver 1959), but the host has now been recorded as Gastrolobium dilatatum (Brumley 2020).
In Western Australia.
Eleven
east Asian species principally associated with Betulaceae, resembling Tinocallis except for the lack of
spinal tubercles, but probably more closely related to Pterocallis, differing from that genus in that the spinal and
marginal hairs on abdominal tergites 1-4 are usually unduplicated. Accounts are available for Japan (Higuchi
1972), China (Qiao et al. 2005b, J.
Chen et al. 2020), the Korean
peninsula (including DNA barcoding; Y. Lee et al. 2017, 2018) and India (Chakrabarti 1988). Quednau (2003) reviewed the genus as a
whole, illustrating all available morphs of species then known, and placed Paratinocallis, previously regarded as
closer to Pterocallis, as a
subgenus of Mesocallis. Mesocallis
alnicola Ghosh
Colour in life is unrecorded, probably pale yellow. Apterous as well as alate viviparae are described;
BL of apterae 1.0-1.2 mm, of alatae 1.3-1.4 mm. Alatae have 9-11 secondary rhinaria on ANT
III, distributed along most of length of segment. On Alnus
nepalensis in Meghalaya, India (A.K. Ghosh 1974). Biology and sexuales are unrecorded. Mesocallis
carpinicola Y. Lee Adult viviparae are all alate, pale yellow
with antennae, legs and forewing vein Cu1b having similar dark
pigmentation to M. pteleae; BL
1.3-1.6 mm. On the undersides of leaves of Carpinus laxiflora in South Korea (Y. Lee et al. 2018). Morphological discrimination from the very similar M. pteleae is mainly size-related and
may not be entirely reliable. Mesocallis
(Paratinocallis) corylicola (Higuchi) Adult viviparae are all alate, pale yellow
with usually only ANT V and VI, apices of tibiae and tarsi pale brown; BL c.
1.5 mm. Described from Corylus sieboldiana in Japan (Higuchi
1972), and also recorded from C.
heterophylla in Korea (Quednau 1979) and China (Qiao et al. 2005b). Sexual morphs and life cycle are unknown. 2n=10 (Blackman 1986). Mesocallis
fagicola Matsumura
Alatae are very small, pale yellow; BL c. 0.6 mm. ANT III has about 6 secondary rhinaria
spaced out along segment. Described from
Fagus sylvatica in Japan
(Matusumura 1919), and not recorded since.
Biology and sexuales are unknown. Mesocallis
obtusirostris Ghosh Alatae are pale yellow; BL 1.2-1.5
mm. ANT III has 3-7 rhinaria, mostly
on basal part. On Alnus nepalensis (with one record from Betula alnoides) in India (Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal) and Nepal
(Chakrabarti 1988). Sexual morphs were
reported by Chakrabarti (1988, p.69). Mesocallis
(Paratinocallis) occulta Y. Lee Alatae are pale yellow, with legs and
antennae mainly pale; BL 0.9-1.5 mm. On undersides of leaves of Corylus spp. in South Korea (Y. Lee et al. 2018). Revealed by DNA
barcoding to be distinct from M.
corylicola (Y. Lee et al.
2017); the morphological discriminants given in the key between these two
species may not be entirely reliable. Mesocallis
platycaryae Qiao
Apterae are translucent white; BL c.1.0-1.2 mm. Living dispersed on
undersides of leaves of Platycarya
strobilacea (Juglandaceae) in Anhui Province, China (J. Chen et al. 2020). Alatae are unknown. Mesocallis
pteleae Matsumura
Alatae are pale yellow, with ANT III brown-black, rest of antennal
flagellum dark-banded, dark front of head, mainly brown fore tibiae and
tarsi, mid and hind legs pale (except for dark spots at ends of hind femora),
and a very darkly-bordered forewing vein Cu1b (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.2-1.6 mm.
Described originally (Matsumura 1919) from Ptelea trifoliata, which is unlikely to be a true host. Since
recorded from species of Alnus, Betula, Corylus, Ostrya and Carpinus (although records from Carpinus could be referable to M. carpinicola). In Japan, Korea and
China. Mesocallis
sawashibae (Matsumura)
Alatae and apterae are pale yellow, with darker antennal joints, dark
distal half of fore tibia, and a black spot near apex of hind tibia; BL
0.8-1.5 mm. On Carpinus cordata and C.
japonica, in Japan, Korea, China and east Siberia. Oviparae occur in October in Japan (Higuchi
1972). 2n=10 (Blackman 1986). Mesocallis
taoi Quednau
Colour in life is unknown, but alatae are probably pale except for
black front of head, ANT I-III and distal parts of ANT IV-VI, black fore
tibiae and forewing vein Cu1b; BL 1.0-1.2 mm. Apterae also occur,
and are pale except for dark antennal joints and tarsi and black spots at
bases of dorsal hairs; BL 0.9-1.2 mm. On Alnus
cremastogyne in China (Quednau 2003). Mesocallis
(Paratinocallis) yunnanensis Zhang Colour in life is unknown, BL c.2.1 mm. On Corylus heterophylla in China (Yunnan;
Zhang & Zhong 1985c). Described as a subspecies of M. (P.) corylicola and raised to full species status by Quednau
(2003).
One species on Loranthaceae and Viscaceae in south-east Asia
with sclerotised, box-like body and greatly reduced antennae and legs.
Mesothoracaphis
rappardi (Hille Ris Lambers &
Takahashi) (Fig.60a) Apterae are brownish-black, somewhat shiny;
BL 0.95-1.14 mm. On young shoots or older twigs of Dendrophthoë and Viscum spp.
in Java (Noordam 1991).
A
genus with nominally three species close to Eutrichosiphum, but typically with 4-segmented antennae in the
apterae and sparse, mostly short hairs, which are mostly blunt in apterae and
acute in alatae. Mesotrichosiphum
brevisetosum Noordam Apterae are pear-shaped, colour in life is
unknown; BL c.1.2 mm. Described from a single specimen collected on Lithocarpus bennettii in Java (Noordam
1994). Mesotrichosiphum
pentaiarticulatum Zhang & Qiao Apterae are pear-shaped, with head and
thorax black or blackish green, abdomen brown, and black siphunculi; BL
1.4-1.7 mm. Alatae are undescribed. On young leaves of Castanopsis hainanensis in Hainan, China (D. Zhang & Qiao
2008c). This species would probably be more
appropriately placed in Eutrichosiphum,
and is close to if not synonymous with Eutrichosiphum
nigrum. Mesotrichosiphum
uichancoi Calilung
Apterae are pear-shaped, colour in life is not recorded; BL c. 1.3
mm. The single described alata has
5-segmented antennae with 13-15 secondary rhinaria along the length of ANT
III, forewings with a twice-branched media and hindwings with one oblique
vein. On undersides of young leaves
and branch tips of Premna odorata
in the Philippines (Calilung 1967).
The life cycle is unknown.
Eight
East Asian species distinguished from Nipponaphis
by the ornamentation of the tergum, consisting of rounded pustules which are
rather evenly spaced and sized over the central part of the prosoma and which,
under the light microscope, appear double-walled or ring-like (fig. 36C). The fused abdominal tergites 2-7 have
marginal hairs but there are no spinal hairs on abdominal tergite 7, and
abdominal tergite 8 has 2 (or rarely, 4) hairs. Two species in Japan have been shown to
alternate between Distylium and Castanopsis (Sorin 1987), while most
of the other species that probably belong in the genus are only known from
Fagaceae. The Japanese species have
now been thoroughly reviewed by Aoki et
al. (2021), and as a result of their molecular phylogenetic analysis the
species originally described in the genera Monzenia and Lithoaphis are
now placed in Metanipponaphis. Aoki
et al. (2021) provide a key to the
Japanese species living on Castanopsis;
A.K. Ghosh & Raychaudhuri (1973a) provided a partial key, and Noordam
(1991) gave a detailed generic diagnosis. Qiao et al. (2018) reviewed and keyed three Chinese species. Metanipponaphis
assamensis Ghosh & Raychaudhuri Apterae are aleyrodiform, oval,
"light brown to yellow" (darker in life?); BL 1.7-1.8 mm (A.K.
Ghosh & Raychaudhuri 1973a). On Castanopsis tribuloides in Meghalaya,
India. Other morphs and life cycle are
unknown. Metanipponaphis
cuspidatae (Essig & Kuwana) Host-alternating between Distylium racemosum and Castanopsis spp. The galls on the
twigs of Distylium are large and
globular (Aoki et al. 2021). Emigrant alatae emerging in autumn (BL
1.8-2.1 mm) give rise to dark purple, lightly wax-dusted aleyrodiform apterae
(BL 1.5-1.7 mm) on branches of Castanopsis
spp. (Aoki et al. 2021). Records from
other plants (e.g. Castanea, Cinnamonum, Ficus, Quercus, Litsea) are likely to be
misidentifications. Alate sexuparae
apparently return to Distylium in
May, but anholocyclic populations also remain on Castanopsis throughout the year (Takahashi 1962a). In Japan, Taiwan and China. Metanipponaphis
echinata Ghosh
Apterae are aleyrodiform, oval, "light to dark brown"
(prepared specimens?); BL 0.7-0.9 mm (A.K. Ghosh 1974). Described from Castanopsis histrix in Meghalaya, India. The pustules on the pleuromaginal region of
the prosoma are elongate, tapering to a blunt apex, and often have a hooked
profile; specimens in the BMNH collection from C. carlesii and C.
sclerophylla in Hangzhou, China (leg. V.F. Eastop) are rather larger but
have similar ornamentation, and may be this species. The feeding position of the Indian aphids was
not recorded, but the Chinese aphids were feeding on the leaves. Other morphs and life cycle are unknown. Metanipponaphis
globuli (Monzen)
(New combination; Aoki et al.
2021). Small green spherical galls are
formed on twigs of Distylium racemosum,
usually in leaf axils. There is no
host alternation. According to Sorin (1960), there are only 4 generations per
year in Japan. Alate sexuparae (BL c.
1.4 mm) emerge in late October, and produce sexuales on undersides of
leaves. Eggs are laid on the twigs and
do not hatch until early September of the following year, the fundatrices
mature rapidly and produce one generation of apterae in the galls, which then
produce the sexuparae. The sexuparae,
like those of other monoecious Metanipponaphis,
have dimorphic embryos. There are reports that alatae emerge from galls twice
a year, in June and October (Monzen 1954; but see Aoki et al. 2021, who provide further information on life cycle and
biology). Itô & Hattori (1983)
reported gall predation by Nola innocua
(Lepidoptera). In Japan and Korea
(Paik & Choi 1969). The
male genitalia were described and illustrated by Wieczorek et al. (2012). Metanipponaphis
ihai (Sorin)
(New combination; Aoki et al.
2021). Galls on twigs of Distylium
racemosum in southern Japan are pale yellowish green, spherical, soft and
rather rough-surfaced, 2-4 cm in diameter (fig. 130D).
Alate sexuparae (BL c. 1.8 mm) emerge in November-December and deposit
dimorphc first instars on undersides of leaves of Distylium, which
develop into males and dark reddish purple adult oviparae in mid-January, and
eggs are laid on the twigs (Sorin 1996). Hatching of eggs, fundatrix and gall
development have not been described. This species is very similar to M. cuspidatae; differences are
discussed by Aoki et al. (2021). Metanipponaphis
lithocarpicola (Takahashi) Apterae are aleyrodiform, almost circular,
black, usually with a little white wax marginally; BL 1.0-1.3 mm. On undersides of leaves of Lithocarpus sp. in Taiwan (Takahashi
1933), and there is a record from Castanopsis
sclerophylla in Fujian Province, China (Chen et al. 2014). Other morphs
and life cycle are unknown. Metanipponaphis
rotunda Takahashi
Host-alternating in Japan between Distylium
racemosum and Castanopsis
spp. The galls on Distylium are formed on leaf petioles, and sometimes on the
fruit. They are pale green and rather
slender, 1.7-2.8 cm long (Sorin 1987).
Alatae migrate to Castanopsis
spp., producing aleyrodiform apterae which are black, almost circular,
dorsally depressed, BL 1.0-1.3 mm, and live on undersides of leaves. Alatae sexuparae are produced on leaves of Castanopsis sieboldii in April to early May (Aoki et al. 2021). This species could not be included in the key to
aphids on Distylium as the emigrant
alatae from the galls do not seem to have been properly described. Only known
from Japan. Sorin (1996) described the inhabitants of yellowish green galls
on D. racemosum in Okinawa as a
subspecies, M. rotunda nakijinensis.
Metanipponaphis
shiiae (Takahashi)
(New combination; Aoki et al.
2021). Apterae are black, shining,
almost circular, and strongly convex dorsally; BL 1.2-1.5 mm. Alatae have secondary rhinaria distributed ANT
III 21-23, IV 10-11, V 8-11. Apterae
are found on branches of Castanopsis
cuspidata in Japan; immature alatae feed along the midribs on the
undersides of leaves. The life cycle
is unknown; apparently anholocyclic on Castanopsis
in Japan (Takahashi 1959a). Metanipponaphis
shiicola Takahashi
Apterae on Castanopsis are
aleyrodiform, black, oval, dorsally not much depressed; BL 1.1-1.5 mm. On Castanopsis cuspidata in Japan, living
on undersides of leaves along basal part of mid-rib (Takahashi 1959). Molecular studies by Aoki et al. (2021) now indicate that this
species migrates from galls on Distylium
racemosum. Metanipponaphis
silvestrii (Takahashi)
Apterae are aleyrodiform, dark brown, almost circular; BL c.1.0-1.3
mm. Described from leaves of an unknown
host plant in Shansi, China (Takahashi 1935).
Qiao et al. (2018) provided
a full redescription of immature and adult apterae identified as this species
from two species of Quercus in
China. A.K. Ghosh (1974) collected similar apterae in Assam, India, on Lindera sp. Probably the species is misplaced in Metanipponaphis. Other morphs and life cycle are unknown. Metanipponaphis
vandergooti Noordam Appearance in life is unknown, probably
dark; BL of aptera 1.6-1.8 mm. On Lithocarpus
sundaicus in Java. An alata collected in August had BL c.2.2 mm and
secondary rhinaria distributed ANT III 15, IV 7, V 3 (Noordam 1991). The life
cycle is unknown.
One
species with host alternation from Distylium
to Quercus in Japan, in which the
apterae have very short unsegmented antennae and prosoma partially fused with
abdominal plate, and the alatae as well as the apterae lack siphuncular
pores. Metathoracaphis
isensis Sorin (= distylicolens
Sorin) Galls protrude from the
upper sides of the leaves of Distylium
racemosum and are yellowish green, semicircular or helmet-shaped, 1.0-1.6
cm in height. Alatae (with secondary rhinaria distributed ANT III 12-16, IV
7-9, V 5-7) emerge in late June and migrate to Quercus gilva. Apterae living on upper sides of leaves of Q.
gilva are aleyrodiform, oval, somewhat convex dorsally, strongly
sclerotised, blackish brown dusted with greyish wax; BL c.1.0 mm. Alate sexuparae produced in October are
blackish brown with dark forewing veins, and have secondary rhinaria
distributed ANT III 40-47, IV 15-19, V 6-9.
Partly anholocyclic; apterae were found on Quercus throughout the year Sorin (2004) confirmed the life cycle
by host transfers and described the ovipara.
One species in Central Asia,
related to Metopeurum but living on
Amaranthaceae and with prothorax and abdominal tergites 2-4 usually having
well-developed marginal tubercles. Metopeuraphis atriplicis Narzikulov &
Smailova Apterae are green dusted
with greyish wax, BL c.1.7-1.9 mm. In small colonies on undersides of leaves
of Atriplex sp(p). in Kazakhstan. Kadyrbekov (2011c) recorded it from A. cana. Biology and sexual morphs are
unknown.
About ten palaearctic species
on Compositae, mostly described from central and eastern Europe, with six of
the species known only from Ukraine. They are related to Macrosiphoniella but their morphology, and also their physiology (see Woodring et al. 2006), are adapted for ant attendance. Mamontova &
Tshumak (1994) provided a key to species. Metopeurum
achilleae Bozhko Apterae are pale reddish brown,
wax-dusted; BL c.1.8 mm. On flower stalks of Achillea gerberi in Ukraine. This species is very similar to M. capillatum. Metopeurum
borystenicum Bozhko Apterae are pale bluish or reddish green;
BL c.1.9 mm. In dense colonies on stems and leaves of Tanacetum vulgare in Ukraine, and also recorded from T. boreale in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov
2017a). Metopeurum
buryaticum (Pashchenko) (new combination) Apterae are pinkish lilac, in life with
large blackish violet dorsal abdominal spot; BL c.2.8 mm. On flower stems of Tanacetum vulgare, attended by ants (Pashchenko
1999b, as Macrosiphoniella (Sinosiphoniella)). In Siberia (eastern
shore of Lake Baikal), and also recently recorded from Georgia (Barjadze et al. 2010b). [Except for the long
dorsal body hairs the description closely matches that of M. fuscoviride.] Metopeurum
capillatum (Börner) Colour of apterae in life is unrecorded;
BL 2.1 mm (one specimen). On Achillea sp.,
possibly either atrata or moschata. In Austrian Alps. Metopeurum
enslini (Börner) Apterae are blackish; BL 2.6-3.0 mm. On stems
and root collars of Tanacetum vulgare.
In Germany, and Ukraine (Bozhko 1963). Metopeurum
fuscoviride Stroyan Plate 27g (Fig.52a) Apterae have a dark brown head and thorax,
reddish, pink or green abdomen with a black central patch (disappearing in
preserved specimens), and black siphunculi and cauda (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.8-2.9 mm. In ant-attended colonies on Tanacetum vulgare, and occasionally on
other Tanacetum spp., with single
records also from Achillea millefolium,
Leucanthemum vulgare and Artemisia alba (the latter from
Kazakhstan as ssp. kasachstanica;
Smailova 1974). In Europe, west Siberia, Iran and Central Asia. Monoecious
holocyclic with oviparae and apterous males in late August-September. Loxdale et al.
(2011) analysed variation within and between local populations in Germany
using microstatellite markers. Senft et
al. (2017) studied its small-scale population dynamics. Lysiphlebus
hirticornis is a host-specific parasitoid. 2n=8. Metopeurum gentianae Mamontova &
Tshumak Apterae are dark green, with
yellow antennae and legs; BL not given. On Gentiana asclepiadea in Ukraine.
Metopeurum
matricariae Bozhko Apterae are reddish brown with darker
dorsal abdominal spots, black siphunculi and a pale cauda; BL c.2.2 mm. In
dense colonies on stems of Matricaria
chamomilla in Ukraine, where it has also been recorded from Tripleurospermum inodorum (Mamonotova-Solukha
1966). It is also reported to occur on Matricaria
sp. and Tanacetum (=Pyrethrum) tanacetoides in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2014d). Metopeurum
millefolii Mamontova
& Tshumak Apterae are ash-grey;
BL 1.6-1.8 mm. On Achillea millefolium in
Ukraine, and also recorded from Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2011b). Metopeurum urticae Mamontova &
Tshumak Apterae are yellow with dark
antennae, head, legs and siphunculi ; BL 2.1-2.4 mm. On undersides of leaves
of Urtica dioica in Ukraine.
About 18 species resembling Acyrthosiphon but perhaps more closely
related to Sitobion, and like that
genus typically with Rosaceae as primary hosts and migrating to Poaceae. The
generic positions of the few species with other host associations are
uncertain. Accounts are available for north-west Europe (Stroyan 1982a, Heie
1994, Blackman 2010) and northern India (Raychaudhuri et al. 1980). Blackman et
al. (1989) discussed enzyme differences between closely-related European
species. Metopolophium
albidum Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are pale straw yellow to pale
yellowish green, without a green spinal stripe, but sometimes with green
spots at bases of siphunculi (see
influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.9-2.7 mm. On grasses such as Arrhenatherum elatius, sometimes in
large numbers causing red and yellow discoloration of grass blades (Stroyan
1950). Throughout Europe. Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae and alate males
in November (original description). 2n=16. Metopolophium
alpinum Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are dull green with pale
appendages; BL 2.6-3.8 mm. Alatae have dusky narrow dorsal abdominal
cross-bands. In spring colonies on Rosa
spp. in alpine habitats in
France, Austria and Switzerland. It is now also recorded from west Siberia
(Stekolshchikov & Khureva 2020). Presumably heteroecious holocyclic,
migrating to grasses, as it has been found on Poa alpina in Austria. It is also recorded from Carex. Oviparae and alate males occur
on wild Rosa leaves in October
(original description). Metopolophium
arcticum Stekolshchikov &
Khureva Colour in life unknown, and
apterous viviparae probably not produced; BL of fundatrix 1.7-2.7 mm. Host
plant uncertain, but pitfall-trapped in areas where Dryas punctata was predominant vegetation. In arctic west Siberia
(Stekolshchikov & Khureva 2020). Life cycle abbreviated, with oviparae
and apterous males trapped along with fundatrices in July-August. Metopolophium
arctogenicolens Richards Apterous viviparae are undescribed,
oviparae are pale green: BL 2.0-2.4 mm. Described from oviparae and one
apterous male collected in July-August on Taraxacum
arctogenum (= ceratophorum) on Ellesmere Island, North-West
Territories, Canada. Specimens were
maintained on this plant in the laboratory (original description). Metopolophium
chandrani (David & Narayanan) (= M. graminum Raychaudhuri, L.K. Ghosh
& Das, = M. simlaense Chakrabarti
& Raychaudhuri; Eastop & Blackman 2005) Apterae are yellowish green; BL 1.9-2.6
mm. On grasses (Bromus, Poa) in India. Oviparae and alate
males were collected (along with apterous viviparae) on Rubus opulifolius in Himachal Pradesh in December (Agarwala &
Mahapatra 1990). Also recorded from Rosa
sp., and from an unidentified shrub (as M. simlaense). Metopolophium
(Metopolophinum) darjeelingense L.K. Ghosh Apterae are greenish with brighter green
spinal stripe, appendages pale except for apices of antennae; BL 2.2-2.5 mm.
On Hypericum sp. in West Bengal;
the host plant is unusual for a member of this genus, but is confirmed by a
subsequent collection (Raychaudhuri, M.R. Ghosh & R.C. Basu 1978, as M. davidi). The species is also
unusual in having spinulose femora and 4 hairs on first tarsal segments,
justifying its placement in a separate subgenus. [Note: M. darjilingense Raychaudhuri, M.R. Ghosh & R.C. Basu (1978)
is a different species, from an unknown host; see also under M. lacheni.] Metopolophium
dirhodum (Walker) Rose-Grain
Aphid Plate 23h Apterae are green or yellowish green
with a brighter green spinal stripe, and have antennae with dark apices to
each segment (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.6-2.9 mm. Alatae have a rather pale
abdomen, sometimes with indistinct brownish cross-bars on anterior tergites.
In Europe it occurs on wild and cultivated Rosa spp. in spring, and is heteroecious holocyclic, migrating in
June to numerous species of Poaceae and Cyperaceae. It is a major pest of
cereals, and has become widely distributed especially in temperate regions of
the world (see Blackman & Eastop, 2000). Some overwintering on grasses
occurs in western Europe, and populations introduced to other parts of the
world – or at least those in New Zealand (Nicol et al. 1997) and Brazil (Lopes-da-Silva & Vieira 2007) – seem
to be permanently parthenogenetic. 2n=18. Metopolophium
fasciatum Stroyan Apterae are pale green with a darker
green spinal stripe, frequently with yellow spots at bases of siphunculi; BL
1.7-3.4 mm. On grasses, especially Arrhenatherum
elatius. Only known from UK, except for a single aptera from Iceland
(BMNH collection, leg. R.N.B. Prior). Potentially heteroecious holocyclic, as
there is an autumn migration and production of oviparae on Rosa canina, but males are rare in
comparison with those of M. dirhodum,
and spring populations on Rosa have
not been identified, so it is thought to be predominantly anholocyclic in UK (Stroyan
1982a). [We have examined type specimens of M. berberinutritum Zhang, Chen, Zhong & Li, described from
(vagrants on?) Berberis in China (G. Zhang 1999); this has longer antennae (1.33
× BL as opposed to c.1.0 × BL in UK populations of fasciatum, but is otherwise very similar.] 2n=18*. Metopolophium
festucae (Theobald) Apterae are rather shiny, evenly
yellowish green to green or salmon pink, with antennae progressivly darker
from III to VI; BL 1.4-2.2 mm. Alatae have conspicuous dark dorsal abdominal
cross-bands. On many genera and species of Poaceae in Europe (including
Iceland), Iran and Central Asia (Kadyrbekov 2017a), and it has been
introduced to New Zealand, but is not recorded from Australia (contrary to
Teulon & Stufkens 2002). Populations on cereal crops show slight
morphological differences and are regarded as a subspecies, M.
festucae ssp. cerealium Stroyan.
There are records of aphids resembling M.
festucae from Argentina, Bolivia, and western USA, and populations in Chile and USA have been
identified as ssp. cerealium
(Remaudičre et al. 1993, Halbert et al.
2013a). Monoecious holocyclic with alate
males, but anholocyclic overwintering is common in both subspecies. See also
Blackman & Eastop (2000). 2n=16 (including ssp. cerealium). Metopolophium
frisicum Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are shining green, with
ill-defined olive or brownish green dorsal abdominal shield, and dark
antennae, siphunculi and cauda; BL 1.3-2.4 mm. On Poa spp., especially P.trivialis,
feeding on upper sides of leaf-blades in shady, damp situations. In
north-west, northern and central Europe. An earlier record from North America
(Börner 1952) is unsubstantiated (Foottit et
al. 2006), but A. Jensen (aphidtrek.org)
has collected samples from Washington, Oregon and Colorado that may be this
species (see also Skvarla et al.
2017). Monoecious holocyclic with oviparae and apterous males in October (but
anholocyclic in UK). Metopolophium
lacheni Agarwala, Mondal &
Raychaudhuri Colour of apterae in
life is unknown; BL c.1.8-2.4 mm. Alatae have dark dorsal abdominal
cross-bands. On Rubus sp. in
north-east India (Sikkim). Oviparae and alate males were collected in
December (original description, as M.
darjeeligense ssp. lacheni). Metopolophium
longicaudatum David &
Hameed Apterae are pale; BL 2.2-2.9
mm. On wheat (Triticum sp.) in
Himachal Pradesh, India. Other morphs are unknown. Metopolophium
montanum Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are evenly green or apple green, without
a darker green spinal stripe; BL 1.8-2.8 mm. Alatae have conspicuous dark
dorsal abdominal cross-bands. In spring colonies on wild Rosa spp. in montane regions of
Switzerland, Austria, France and Spain. Presumably heteroecious
holocyclic, migrating to grasses as subsequently found on Poa alpina in Austria. Oviparae were
found on wild Rosa leaves in
October (original description). Metoplophium
mukhamedievi Akhmedov Apterae are shining pale green: BL
2.2-2.9 mm. On Lonicera microphylla in
Central Asia. This species does not seem to be clearly distinct from M. dirhodum. Metopolophium
palmerae (Hille Ris Lambers) Plate 23i Apterae are probably green: BL c.2.7 mm. On
Elymus sp. in Colorado, USA. Metopolophium pedicularus (Richards) Colour of apterae in life is unknown; BL
c 2.8 mm. On Pedicularis seudetica
in arctic Canada (North-West Territories). Monoecious holocyclic; oviparae
and apterous males were collected in mid-August (original description). The
generic position of this species is uncertain.
Metopolophium
rosaesuctum Zhang Apterae are reddish green; BL c. 3.4 mm.
Alatae are undescribed. On Rosa sp.
in China. Metopolophium
sabihae Prior Apterae are yellow-green, apple green or
blue-green; BL 1.3-2.1 mm. On Festuca
rubra, Vulpia membranacea and Ammophila arenaria growing in sand
dunes. In western Europe (France, Belgium, UK). Aphids identified as this
species have now been found on Wrangel Island in eastern Siberia, where
fundatrices were collected in July and oviparae in July-August, and this
species is becoming increasingly common (Stekolshchikov & Khruleva 2014;
Khruleva & Stekolshchikov 2019). Anholocyclic, or partially monoecious
holocyclic in UK, with oviparae and both apterous (or brachypterous) and
alate males produced in culture in November (original description). Metopolophium
taimyricum Stekolshchikov
& Khureva Colour in life unknown;
BL of aptera 2.5-3.3mm. Only collected by sweeping vegetation so host plant(s)
uncertain, but commonest in sweeps of Hedysarum
hedysaroides ssp. arcticum. In the tundra zone in arctic
west Siberia (Stekolshchikov & Khureva 2020). Life cycle abbreviated,
with fundatrices, apterae, oviparae and apterous males all collected in July. Metopolophium
tenerum Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are dirty green or reddish,
rather shiny; BL 1.3-2.2 mm. On Deschampsia
flexuosa and Festuca spp. in
north-western and northern Europe. A record from Turkey (Görür et al. 2011b) requires additional
conformation. Monoecious holocyclic, with oviperae and alate males in October
in the Netherlands (original description).
Seven
or more very small species on undersides of leaves of Quercus in Mexico. Apterae have 4- or 5-segmented antennae and
long thick spiculose spinal and marginal hairs, except subgenus Anacallis which has inconspicuous spinal hairs. Alate
viviparae are unknown except for one specimen trapped in Panama. The genus
was extensively revised by Quednau & Remaudičre (1996), and reviewed
again with illustrations of all species by Quednau (1999). Mexicallis
analiliae Remaudičre
Apterae are white to creamy white; BL 0.7-1.1 mm. Spinal hair-bearing processes are very
variably developed; at least some are usually long and cylindrical. On Quercus
spp. especially Q. rugosa, in
Mexico. Alate males and an immature ovipara were described by Quednau &
Remaudičre (1996) from a population including apterous viviparae on Quercus sp. in October. Certain
characters, such as the length of the last rostral segment, vary greatly
between populations, and two subspecies have been described from Mexican
populations, M. analiliae pumilus on a dwarf Quercus (?frutex)
(Remaudičre 1982b), and M. analiliae
caulifer on Q. rugosa (Quednau
& Remaudičre 1996). Mexicallis
(Anacallis) areolatus Remaudičre Apterae are whitish with dark green
marginal spots on each segment; BL 0.8-1.2 mm. Placed in a separate subgenus (Anacallis) on account of the peculiar development
of the frontal and marginal processes. and lack of spinal hairs except on
abdominal tergites 7 and 8. On Quercus rugosa (and one specimen only
found on Q. mexicana) in Mexico
(Remaudičre 1982b). Mexicallis
(Anacallis) brevituberculatus Quednau &
Remaudičre Colour of aptera in life
is unknown; described from one specimen, BL 1.1 mm, on an unidentified Quercus sp. in Mexico (Quednau &
Remaudičre 1996). Mexicallis
calvus Remaudičre
Apterae are whitish: BL 0.7-0.9 mm.
Spinal hairs on abdomen are of remarkably different sizes; those on
abdominal tergites 2, 6, 7 and 8 are very long with tuberculate bases,
whereas those on abdominal tergites 1,3,4 and 5 are minute. On Quercus
sp. (?mexicana) in Mexico
(Remaudičre 1982b). Mexicallis
longicaudus Remaudičre Apterae are similar to M. spinifer, and previously described as a subspecies of that
species. On an unidentified Quercus
sp. in Mexico. Mexicallis
panamensis Quednau & Remaudičre Apterae are white; BL 0.67-0.8 mm. On an
unidentified Quercus sp. in Panama
(Quednau & Remaudičre 1996), and on Q.
oocarpa in Costa Rica (Villalobos Muller et al. 2010). Mexicallis
spinifer Remaudičre
Apterae are dark green, or pale greenish grey with two darker green
irregular lateral bands running from pronotum to abdominal tergite 5 or 6; BL
0.7-1.0 mm. Dorsal chaetotaxy shows
considerable variation (Remaudičre 1982).
On Quercus spp. (including crassipes, mexicana, rugosa) in
Mexico. Quednau & Remaudičre (1996) described the alate male found on an
unidentified Quercus sp. in
December, and Wieczorek et al. (2011) described and
illustrated the male genitalia.
One species in east Asia of uncertain affinities; possibly
related to Coloradoa, except that the
eyes have distinct posterior ocular tubercles and although feeding on Artemisia, R IV+V is not
stilletto-shaped.
Micraphis
artemisiae (Takahashi) Apterae are yellow or greenish, BL c.1.3
mm. On leaves and stems of Artemisia capillaris in China, Taiwan
and Japan. Alatae have 12-18 secondary rhinaria on III and 4-7 on IV. The life cycle is unknown.
Four or five species mostly on Urtica, with siphunculi similar to Aulacorthum
but with smooth, very large and somewhat divergent antennal tubercles. Microlophium
carnosum (Buckton) Plate 23e Apterae are various shades of green,
pink or reddish purple (see
influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 3.1-4.3 mm. Alatae have dark marginal
sclerites but only faint spino-pleural markings. On undersides of leaves and
up stems of Urtica spp., especially
U. dioica. Also recorded from Girardinia cuspidata (Tao 1999). In
Europe, Asia east to Pakistan and Mongolia, Africa (Burundi, Rwanda), North
America and Chile (Fuentes-Contreras et al. 1997); a record from Argentina
(Heie 1994) could not be substantiated. Monoecious holocyclic with alate
males. Perrin (1976) studied its population ecology and natural enemies.
2n=20. [In UK another, undescribed species occurs on U. dioica which can be distinguished morphologically by the
characters given in the key, and has 2n=16. This is possibly the species with
2n=16 from Crimea listed as M. evansi Theobald
by Kuznetsova & Shaposhnikov (1963).] Microlophium
rubiformosanum (Takahashi) Apterae are green, with antennal and leg
segments blackish distally, and siphunculi blackish except at bases; BL c.3.5
mm. Alatae are without dorsal abdominal markings. On Rubus spp.in Taiwan and Japan. 2n=12. Microlophium
sibiricum (Mordvilko) Apterae are brownish green or dark green;
BL 3.4-4.4 mm. Alatae have dark spino-pleural as well as marginal markings.
On undersides of leaves and up stems of Urtica
spp., especially U. urens. In
Europe (not UK) and across Asia to east Siberia, and possibly also in Japan
(Miyazaki 1971, as Acyrthosiphon
carnosus); also in USA, where populations occur mainly on U. dioica ssp. gracilis and are regarded as a subspecies, M. sibiricum ssp. tenuicauda Hille Ris Lambers,
although there seem to be no consistent morphological differences from the Old World form. Monoecious
holocyclic, with apterous males.
About 12 mostly African
fern-feeding species related to Micromyzus
but with 2-3 hairs (one sense peg) on first tarsal segments, and alatae have
more normal wing venation, with wing veins dark but not heavily bordered,
radial sector more moderately curved and media once- or twice-branched.
Apterae often have dark siphunculi and dusky or dark dorsal sclerotisation. Remaudičre & Autrique (1985) revised the genus,
providing keys to apterae and alatae. Micromyzella
anisopappi Remaudičre Apterae are pale with black siphuncular
apices and cauda; BL c.1.5-1.7 mm. Alatae have secondary rhinaria distributed
III 10-15, IV 2-4, V 0(-2), and variably developed dorsal abdominal markings.
On Anisopappus africanus, often in
company with Sitobion hirsutirostris.
In Burundi. Micromyzella
davalliae Remaudičre Apterae are dark with black appendages
incl. cauda; BL 1.4-2.5 mm. Alatae have secondary rhinaria distributed III
26-42, IV 12-23, V 4-11, and dorsal abdomen with dark cross-bands. Common in
the rainy season on the epiphytic fern Davallia
chaerophylloides (= denticulata)
growing on oil palms in Burundi (Remaudičre & Autrique 1985). Monoecious
holocyclic, producing oviparae and alate males in late February-April. Micromyzella
eliei Remaudičre Apterae are black, except for basal parts
of antennae and femora, tibiae and cauda; BL 1.6-2.1 mm. Alatae have
secondary rhinaria distributed III 30-34, IV 22-26, V 10-11 (one specimen).
On Helichrysum odoratissimum in
Burundi. Micromyzella
filicis (van der Goot) Apterae are grass-green, sometimes with a
black dorsal abdominal spot, black antennae and siphunculi; BL c. 1.7 mm.
Alatae have 8-14 secondary rhinaria on ANT III only and no dark dorsal
abdominal spot. On undersides of fronds, or in furled fronds, of ferns in
many genera (Antrophyum, Asplenium,
Blechnum, Pityrogramma, Polypodium,
Pteris, Sphenomeris, Thelypteris).
In Java (Noordam 2004), and introduced to Australia (Brumley 2020) and New
Zealand, where it was collected on Platycerium
sp. (BMNH collection, leg. V.F. Eastop). 2n=36 (in New Zealand). Micromyzella judenkoi (Carver) Apterae are undescribed; BL of alatae
1.2-1.7 mm. Alatae have secondary rhinaria
distributed III 9-18, IV 0-8, V 0-4. Described from alate viviparae and an alate
male caught in yellow trays in Australia and Sri Lanka. Subsequently apterae
collected on ferns (Asplenium, Athyrium, Cheilanthes) in
northern India have been assigned to this species, but without a published
description. Alatae have also been trapped in
Hong Kong (described by Qiao & Jiang 2005) and the Philippines (BMNH
collection). Micromyzella
kathleenae Remaudičre (Fig.43q) Colour of apterae in life is unrecorded,
probably rather pale, with dark siphunculi and black cauda; BL 1.7-2.0 mm.
Alatae have secondary rhinaria distributed III 15-23, IV 12-16, V 8-12, and
paired dark patches on abdominal tergites. On Asplenium aethiopicum (= praemorsum)
in Burundi. Micromyzella
pterisoides (Theobald) (Fig.43p) Apterae are dark, with antennae and legs
mainly dark, black siphunculi and paler cauda ; BL 1.8-2.2mm. Alatae have 7-15 sec. rhin. on III only and an
often extensive dusky or dark dorsal abdominal patch.
On ferns (Arthopteris, Asplenium, Davallia, Drynaria, Nephrolepis,
Osmunda, Pleopeltis) in eastern and southern Africa. Oviparae and alate
males occur in colonies in small numbers in rainy season (Remaudičre &
Autrique 1985). Micromyzella
sleonensis (Eastop) (Fig.43o) Apterae are brown; BL 1.4-1.6 mm. Alatae
have secondary rhinaria distributed III 2-9, IV 0-2. On stems of ferns of
family Adiantaceae (Adiantum, Pellaea), described from Sierra Leone,
and also found in Kenya and South Africa (BMNH collection). Micromyzella
sophiae Remaudičre Colour of apterae in life is unrecorded,
probably rather pale with variably developed dark sclerotic dorsal markings,
antennae, siphunculi, and distal parts of femora dark, and a pale cauda; BL
1.5-1.9 mm. Alatae have secondary rhinaria distributed III 14-24, IV 8-15, V
2-6 and paired dark patches on abdominal tergites. On Asplenium aethiopicum (= praemorsum)
in Burundi, in mixed colonies with M.
kathleenae.
Eight
Asian species on a range of host plants including ferns, and related to Micromyzus and Micromyzella, but with
long dorsal body hairs. Su et al.
(2012) reviewed the species in China. Life cycles are unknown except for one
species, M. kuwakusae, recently shown
to have a sexual phase on Loropetalum
(Hamamelidaceae). Micromyzodium
dasi Verma Apterae are bright yellow with dark head,
antennae and siphunculi; BL c. 1.9-2.0 mm. Alatae have secondary rhinaria
distributed III 20-35, IV 10-20, V 0-2. Described from undersides of fronds
of an unidentified fern, and subsequently recorded (including an alate male)
from Adiantum caudatum and Cheilanthes sp. (Saha &
Chakrabarti 1988d). In north-west India. Micromyzodium
filicium David Plate 17b Apterae are shining black, antennae dark
beyond III, legs dark at femoral apices, siphunculi dark at base and apex but
with middle part white; BL 1.5-2.0 mm.
Alatae have 12-16 secondary rhinaria on ANT III only. In large numbers
on undersides of fronds or on young growth of various ferns (Adiantum, Asplenium, Cheilanthes,
Eriosorus, Nephrolepis, Pityrogramma, Polypodium, Pteris, Thelypteris).
Also recorded from plants in some angiosperm families; Didymocarpus and Streptocarpus
(Gesneriaceae), Aristolochia (Aristolachiaceae),
Cypripedium (Orchidaceae) and Geranium (Geraniaceae). The number of
such records suggests that these were not all vagrants, but this extended
host range needs further confirmation. In Pakistan, north and south India,
and Nepal. 2n=12. Micromyzodium
kuwakusae (Uye) Apterae are yellow with mainly dark
thorax and a large black dorsal abdominal patch; BL 1.4-1.8 mm. Alatae have a
black patch and secondary rhinaria distributed III 29-37, IV 12-22, V 5–9. On
Fatoua villosa (Moraceae) in Japan,
and now also recorded from Pilea notata
and Urtica fissa (Urticaceae)
in China (Su et al. 2012) and Korea (Y. Lee et
al. 2014a). This species was described in
Macrosiphoniella and regarded as a nomen dubium in catalogues, but
rediscovered by M. Miyazaki (pers. comm. 1979), who donated specimens to BMNH
collection. Sugimoto (2017b) has now shown that it is heteroecious in Japan,
with Loropetalum chinense as
the primary host, and described oviparae, males and the spring generations.
Oviparae and fundatrices are yellow without a black dorsal abdominal patch,
and the patch is also reduced in early spring generations. [Note: the aphids
from Pilea notata listed by Su et al (2012) under the name M.
kuwakusae have the same collection data and identification number as
specimens described as Kaochiaoja pileophaga Zhang in Zhang et
al. (1992a), so Su et al. presumably consider the latter name
to be a synonym of M. kuwakusae] Micromyzodium
levipes (R.C. Basu &
Raychudhuri) Colour of apterae in
life is unrecorded; BL c.1.5 mm. Described from Chromolaena (=Eupatorium) odorata in India (Arunachal Pradesh). Micromyzodium
nipponicum (Moritsu) Apterae are dark brown (immatures are
pale bluish grey); BL 1.4-1.6 mm. On Perilla
frutescens var. crispa and Perilla sp. in Japan, Taiwan, Korea (Y. Lee et
al. 2014a) and mainland China (Hunan),
where it is also recorded from Agastache
rugosa and Cirsium japonicum
(an unlikely host) (Su et al.
2012). The colonies on Perilla are
formed on the roots. Micromyzodium
polypodii Takahashi (Fig.43j) Apterae are yellow with blackish antennae,
siphunculi and cauda; BL c. 2 mm. Alatae have forewing veins broadly bordered
with fuscous, and black dorsal abdominal markings including a large central
patch. On unidentified ferns in Japan, and now also recorded from China, with
the host identified as Parathelypteris
glanduligera (Su et al. 2012). Micromyzodium
spinulosum Miyazaki Apterae are shining black, with yellowish
brown antennae and legs, black siphunculi and a pale cauda; BL 1.1-1.5 mm.
Alatae have 7-13 secondary rhinaria on ANT III. On stems of grasses (Digitaria adscendens, Oplismenus compositus) in Japan.
2n=10. Micromyzodium
strobilanthi L.K.
Ghosh Apterae are blackish brown,
with antennae and legs mainly yellowish, with distal parts of femora dark
brown, and dark siphunculi; BL 1.7-2.1 mm. Alatae are undescribed. On Strobilanthes dalhousianus (Acanthaceae) in northern India. One greenish black
aptera also identified as this species was collected from Ruellia tuberosa (Raychaudhuri et al. 1980).
About 10 species of mostly east
Asian fern-feeding aphids close to Micromyzella
but with usually 4 hairs (incl. 2 sense pegs) on first tarsal segments,
and alatae having dark-bordered wing veins and a strongly curved radial
sector. Micromyzus
diervillae Matsumura Apterae are pale green or green; BL c.1.9
mm. Alatae have forewings with a pale pterostigma (cf. Neotoxoptera weigeliae) and
veins narrowly bordered with fuscous, and dorsal abdomen with dark
cross-bands. On Weigela spp. in
Japan, Korea and east Siberia. Probably heteroecious holocyclic, with
migration to an unknown secondary host (a fern?). The fullest description is
that by Takahashi (1965b, as M.
weigelae). Micromyzus hangzhouensis Zhang Apterae have 1-3 rhinaria on ANT III,
siphunculi longer than head width across eyes, and first tarsal segments with
3 hairs; BL c. 2.6 mm. On Glochidion puberum in China (Zhang
& Zhong 1980a). Probably the species is incorrectly placed in Micromyzus, which are typically small
fern feeders. Micromyzus
katoi (Takahashi) Plate 17c (Fig.43r) Apterae are black (original description)
or shining orange-brown, paler spinally and darker on margins and at bases of
siphunculi, antennae and legs banded black and white, siphunculi
blackish-brown, cauda pale (Noordam 2004); BL 1.5-2.1
mm. Alatae have secondary rhinaria on ANT III only, 2-6 (Taiwan) or
8-14 (Java, Australia), and dark-bordered wing-veins. On undersides of fronds
of ferns in certain genera (Microsorium, Platycerium, Polypodium). Described from Taiwan, and subsequently recorded
from Indonesia, Australia, Hawaii and New Caledonia (Mille et al. 2020). However,
at least some of the non-Taiwanese material may be a distinct species
with different colour in life, a relatively longer R IV+V, and alatae with
more secondary rhinaria. Micromyzus
mawphlangensis A.K.
Ghosh Apterae are pale with a brown
spinal patch on abdominal tergites 1-3, dark brown siphunculi and a pale
cauda; BL c.2.1-2.2 mm. Alatae have 3-9 secondary rhinaria on ANT III only,
brown-bordered wing veins and dusky segmental spino-pleural abdominal
sclerites. On a Polypodium sp. in
northern India. Micromyzus
niger van der Goot (Fig.43k) Apterae are shining brown-black, antennae,
femora, tibiae and siphunculi pale with black tips, cauda very dark grey, almost
black, with white wax on distal part (Noordam
2004); BL 0.9-1.3 mm. On undersides of fronds of ferns, which may be curved
inward. Recorded from ferns in several genera (Adiantum, Eriosorus, Pityrogramma, Pteris). Specimens from the grass Dactyloctenium aegyptiacum in the BMNH collection are presumably
vagrants. In Indonesia, Singapore, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Micromyzus
nikkoensis Miyazaki Apterae are whitish to pale yellow with
antennae black, tibiae mainly dark, siphunculi pale with dark tips, cauda
pale; BL 1.5-1.7 mm. On Athyrium (=
Deparia) pycnosorum (Miyazaki 1971), Osmundastrum
asiaticum (Moritsu 1983) and Gymnogramma
totta (BMNH collection, leg. R.L. Blackman) in Japan. 2n=12. Micromyzus
osmundae Takahashi Apterae are yellow with black antennae
and tibiae, and pale siphunculi and cauda; BL c. 2 mm. Alatae are
undescribed. On Osmunda spp. in
Japan. Micromyzus
platycerii Mróz &
Depa Apterae are brown, shiny, with
reddish eyes; BL 2.1-2.6 mm. Alatae have 11-14 secondary rhinaria on ANT III
and dark-bordered wing-veins. On young shoots of Platycerium coronarium, occurring in large numbers on undersides
of leaves, in Thailand. Micromyzus
pojanii (Cermeli & Smith) Apterae are shiny brown with dusky to
black appendages; BL 1.6-1.8 mm. Alatae have strongly bordered wing veins and
secondary rhinaria distributed III 13-16, IV 1-4. On an unidentified
broad-leaved fern in Venezuela (Cermeli & Smith 1979, as Picturaphis), and also recorded from Phlebodium pseudoaureum in Costa Rica
(Zamora Mejías et al. 2012).
Micromyzus
vandergooti Noordam Apterae are orange brown or brownish red,
with black siphunculi and a pale cauda; 1.3-1.7 mm. On ferns of genus Pyrrosia (as Cyclophorus, Drymoglossum),
found living (in one case) on the upperside of a leaf “protected by a
roof" (Noordam 2004). In Java.
About 11 nearctic and
neotropical species on Leguminosae. They are mostly brightly-coloured aphids
and alatae have dark-bordered wing veins. Subgenus Picturaphis have clavate siphunculi. Apterae have marginal
tubercles on abdominal tergites 2-4. Cermeli & Smith (1979) provided keys
to the species of Picturaphis. Microparsus (Picturaphis) brasiliensis (Moreira) Plate 19e Apterae are shiny greenish dark brown
to black (immatures are paler, brownish yellow); BL 1.6-2.0 mm. Alatae are dark brown to black with wing veins
heavily black‑bordered. On
various Leguminosae/Fabaceae (Centrosema, Dolichos, Indigofera, Phaseolus,
Vigna); widely distributed in the
Caribbean, Central and South America, and also recorded from Florida, USA.
Biology is unknown; presumably mainly anholocyclic. Microparsus
desmodiorum Smith &
Tuatay Apterae are pale yellowish
green to green with head dark yellow to brownish orange, antennae, legs and
siphunculi mainly dark, cauda yellow-orange; BL 1.5-2.0 mm. On Desmodium spp., in eastern USA,
feeding on terminals and seed-pods without distorting growth. Oviparae and
alate males occur in October-November (original description). Microparsus olivei Smith & Tuatay (Fig.26c,d) Apterae are dark green, with head orange to
brownish, antennae and legs bicoloured yellow and black, siphunculi black and
cauda orange; BL 1.4-1.9 mm. On Desmodium spp. in eastern USA,
feeding on leaves and terminals and causing some curling, and also recorded
from Mexico, Cuba, Panama, Venezuela, Puerto Rico and Costa Rica (Quirós et al. 2009; Villalobos Muller et al. 2010). Oviparae and
alate males occur in September-October (original description).
Microparsus (Picturaphis) puertoricensis (Smith) Apterae are shining reddish brown; BL
1.3-1.9 mm. On Phaseolus adenanthus in
Puerto Rico. Alatae were described by Smith & Gaud (1974). Microparsus
rhynchosiae Remaudičre
& Peńa Martinez Apterae are shining
green, with antennae black except at base, dark apices to femora, and tibiae,
tarsi and distal halves of siphunculi, and a dark band on abdominal tergite
8; BL 1.7-2.1 mm. On a Rhynchosia sp.
in Mexico, colonising undersides of
leaves of prostrate stems at soil level. Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and
alate males in October (original description). Microparsus
singularis (Hottes
& Frison) Apterae are bright
green with orange-brown head, black antennae except for base of segment III,
black and yellow legs, black siphunculi and yellow-orange cauda; BL 1.9-2.2
mm. On Lespedeza spp., especially L. repens, in eastern USA. Monoecious
holocyclic with oviparae and apterous males in October (Smith & Heie
1963, as Megouroparsus kislankoi). Microparsus
tephrosiae (Smith) Apterae are amber to reddish brown, BL
2.3-2.7 mm. Described from Tephrosia
virginiana, on which large colonies may occur and cause stunting of
growth. There are also records from Astragalus
and Cracca (but the Cracca species involved are now placed
in Tephrosia). In eastern USA
(Florida, Mississippi, North Carolina). Oviparae and alate males occur in
October (original description). Microparsus
variabilis Patch Apterae are green with head and cauda
yellow to dark orange, antennae and legs variably pigmented, siphunculi
wholly dark or paler towards bases; BL 1.6-2.0 mm. On Desmodium spp. and Amphicarpaea
monoica in eastern USA. It tightly curls the leaves of Desmodium, and lives on stems and
undersides of leaves of Amphicarpaea
(Hottes & Frison 1931). Oviparae and alate males were found in mid-August
(Smith & Tuatay 1960). Microparsus (Picturaphis) venezuelensis (Cermeli
& Smith) (Fig.26a,b) Apterae are dull greenish to bluish black
(venezuelensis s. str.), or dull
reddish brown (M. venezuelensis ssp. meridensis); BL 1.8-2.6 mm. On Desmodium spp. in Venezuela, and also
recorded from Argentina (Ortego et al.
2004). The two subspecies in Venezuela are separated by differences in
pigmentation, and they possibly also colonise different species of Desmodium. Microparsus (Picturaphis) vignaphilus (Blanchard) Apterae are dark brown to blackish; BL
1.9-2.4 mm. On several genera of Leguminosae/Fabaceae (Cologania, Phaseolus, Vigna) in South America (Argentina, Brazil, Colombia), Mexico, and
Panama (Quirós et al. 2009).
Four North American species on Anthemideae, related to the palaearctic genus Microsiphum, but with much longer dorsal hairs. Three of the species have a dark sclerotic tergum. Smith & Knowlton (1938) and Palmer (1952) reviewed the genus (as Microsiphum). Microsiphoniella acophorum (Smith & Knowlton) Apterae are pear-shaped, shiny brownish black to black, with pale ANT III and mainly pale tibiae (see aphidtrek.org); BL 1.0-1.5 mm. Colonising stems and leaves of Seriphidium tridentatum and Artemisia longifolia in western USA. Oviparae and alate males occur in September-October (Palmer 1952). Microsiphoniella artemisiae (Gillette) Plate 27h Apterae are blackish brown to cinnamon brown, with base of ANT III and most of tibiae pale; BL 1.6-2.0 mm. On stems and leaves of Artemisia and Seriphidium spp. Widely distributed in North America. Oviparae and apterous males occur in September-October (Palmer 1952). Microsiphoniella canadensis (Williams) Apterae are pale green, BL c. 2.4 mm. On stems and leaves (causing some leaf-curl) of Artemisia and Seriphidium spp. in Nebraska, USA, and there are also records from Oregon and Kansas (Smith & Parron 1978). This species, originally placed in Cryptosiphum, has not been adequately described, and its generic placement is problematic. Microsiphoniella oregonensis (Wilson) Apterae are shining chocolate brown, with ANT III-IV pale and tibiae mainly pale; BL c.1.2-1.4 mm. On leaves and stems of Seriphidium tridentatum in western USA (Palmer 1952). It has also been collected on Picrothamnus desertorum (= Artemisia spinescens) (aphidtrek.org) Oviparae and alate males occur in October.
About 10 palaearctic species forming ant-attended colonies on stems of Compositae, related to Macrosiphoniella but with much reduced siphunculi (which still have some polygonal reticulation) and a broad-based triangular cauda. The species in north-west Europe were reviewed by Heie (1995), and those in eastern Europe by Bozhko (1963). Kadyrbekov (2006) revised the genus and provided a key to species. They all seem to be strictly monophagous. Microsiphum diversisetosum Kadyrbekov Apterae are brown, pear-shaped; BL 1.7-2.4 mm. On Artemisia abrotanum in north and west Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2006). Microsiphum giganteum Nevsky Apterae are broadly pear-shaped, pale rose-red or pale green with dark head, a broad brown band across the prothorax, and black antennae and legs; BL 2.1-3.2 mm. On stems of Artemisia spp., especially A. dracunculus, in Ukraine and Central Asia. Apart from its colour in life this species is difficult to distinguish from M. procerae. Microsiphum jazykovi Nevsky Apterae are pear-shaped, shiny brown on head and thorax with abdomen deep green-black, and antennae and legs mainly dark brown-black; BL 1.7-2.2 mm. In dense colonies on upper parts of flower stems of Artemisia absinthium, attended by ants (original description), and since recorded from several other Artemisia spp. (Kadyrbekov 2017a). In Ukraine and Central Asia. Populations with a relatively shorter R IV+V in northern and central Europe were treated as a subspecies, M. jazykovi ssp. wahlgreni Hille Ris Lambers by Kadyrbekov (2006). Fundatrices of this subspecies were described from Switzerland (Hille Ris Lambers 1947a; as M. wahlgreni). Microsiphum millefolii Wahlgren Plate 27i (Fig.5d,e) Apterae are pear-shaped, yellowish or greyish red to dark brown with dark head, antennae, legs, siphunculi and cauda; BL 1.8-2.5 mm. On lower parts of stems of Achillea millefolium, attended by ants. Throughout most of Europe, and also recorded from Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2011b). Monoecious holocyclic, with apterous males (Heie 1995). Microsiphum nudum Holman ( = minus Bozhko; synonymy by Kadyrbekov 2006) Apterae are pear-shaped, greyish or greenish black; BL 1.75-2 mm. On Achillea spp (millefolium, nobilis), living on basal parts of stem and rootstock, in ant shelters. In eastern Europe (Bulgaria, Hungary, Slovakia, Ukraine). Monoecious holocyclic, with oviparae and apterous males in October (original description). Microsiphum procerae Bozhko Apterae are pear-shaped, shining brown with dark antennae and legs; BL c. 1.9-2.1 mm. On upper parts of flower stems of Artemisia procera (= abrotanum) in Ukraine, northern Caucasus, Kazakhstan. A population from the same host plant in the southern Caucasus is regarded by Kadyrbekov (2006) as a subspecies, M. procerae ssp. subalpicum Mamontova. Microsiphum ptarmicae (Cholodkovsky) (= heptapotamicum Kadyrbekov; synonymy by Kadyrbekov 2006) Apterae are dark brown; BL c.1.5-1.8 mm. Described from Achillea ptarmicae in Ukraine, and also recorded forming ant-attended colonies on roots and at bases of stems of Achillea millefolium in Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2000, as M. heptapotamicum). Kadyrbekov (2006) discussed geographical variation in certain characters previously used in species differentiation. Microsiphum pyrethri Bozhko Apterae are brown tinged with red; BL c.1.7 mm. On Pyrethrum millefoliatum (= Tanacetum millefolium) in Ukraine. Microsiphum woronieckae Judenko Apterae are pear-shaped, dusky pink on thorax, abdomen reddish black, antennae black, legs black except for yellowish basal halves of femora; BL 2.2-3.0 mm. In compact ant-attended colonies on lower parts of stems of Artemisia vulgaris. In northern, central and eastern Europe, west Siberia, northern Caucasus and Kazakhstan. Oviparae and apterous males occur in September-October (Hille Ris Lambers 1947a). 2n=12.
One
species related to Thoracaphis but
the aleyrodiform apterae are without dorsal hairs except on abdominal tergite
8, and have very short unsegmented antennae.
It was erroneously transferred to Neothoracaphis
by Eastop & Hille Ris Lambers (1976).
Microunguis
depressa (Takahashi)
Apterae are aleyrodiform, blackish brown, narrowly yellowish brown
marginally, without wax; BL c. 0.9 mm.
On undersides of leaves of an unidentified Quercus sp. in Taiwan (Takahashi 1933; Tao 1966, 1969), or
possibly according to Tao (1999), on Phoebe
sp. Other morphs and life cycle are
unknown.
One
palaearctic species related to Paraprociphilus,
but the apterae on the secondary host have one-segmented tarsi and a very
different association with the host plant. Mimeuria
ulmiphila (del Guercio)
(fig.18B) Terminal
leaf nests are formed on Acer spp.,
especially A. campestre, by
inhibition of shoot growth, twisting and folding of leaves. Fundatrices are olive green-grey, covered with
white wax wool; BL 3.5-4.5 mm. They
give rise to numerous dark brown alatae (BL 2.6-3.3 mm), which fly over an
extended period (June-November).
Apterous exules live mainly on roots of Ulmus; they are yellow, thickly wax-powdered, BL 1.3-2.3 mm,
encased singly in brown microrrhizal cysts (Marchal 1933, Krzywiec
1964). Such cysts have also been found
on Rubus roots close to Ulmus (Vernon 1957). Sexuparae are produced in autumn and return
to Acer, but anholocycly on Ulmus roots often seems to predominate
especially in western Europe. Krzywiec
(1964) suspected that anholocyclic overwintering of immature stages might
also occur on bark of Acer. Recorded from Britain, France, Germany,
Hungary, Greece, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Turkey and also in
Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2017a). For a full account of the life cycle in Poland
and descriptions of all stages see Krzywiec (1962, 1964).
Nine
or more species of conifer-feeding aphids, four nearctic and four or more
palaearctic, in which apterae have fused head and pronotum, eyes usually with
3 facets and well-developed wax glands.
Alatae have forewings with an elongate pterostigma, tapering to a
point at the wing apex, and a bluntly triangular cauda. Heie (1980) reviewed the European species,
the biology of which was studied in detail by Nüsslin (1910). There are more
recent accounts of this genus from China (G. Zhang & Qiao 1997d, G. Zhang
et al. 1999c) and USA (Voegtlin
1995), and a world review with illustrations of all available morphs by
Quednau (2010). Favret (2009) reported on mitochondrial DNA sequence data
that suggest the existence of two undescribed species in the Rocky Mountain
region. The complete mitochondrial genome of one species (M. keteleerifoliae) has been published
(Y. Wang et al. 2015) Mindarus
abietinus Koch Plate 2c, d,
(fig. 15B) Apterae are yellowish green, covered with
wax wool, with antennae and tibiae distinctly darker (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery);
BL 1.2-2.0 mm. Alatae (BL 1.5-2.7 mm)
have dark dorsal abdominal cross-bands.
On young shoots of Abies
spp. (especially alba, nordmanniana), feeding between the
needle bases. There are only 3
generations per year, alate and apterous progeny of the fundatrix producing
very small apterous sexuales. The eggs,
black covered with short white strands of wax, are laid in June-July, but do
not hatch until the following spring. The male genitalia were described and illustrated by Wieczorek et al. (2012). Throughout Europe, the Middle East (Lebanon,
Turkey), common on Abies sibirica in
Kazakhstan (Kadyrbekov 2017a), and on Abies
pindrow in northern Pakistan (Naumann Etienne & Remaudičre
1995). There are also records from
India, Tibet, China and Thailand, although some of these may be due to
confusion with M. japonicus. Zhang & Qiao (1997d) described some
alatae from China (Yunnan) as a subspecies, M. abietinus triprimesensori, but this was synonymised with M. abietinus by Quednau (2010). Records from North America should be
referred to M. pinicolus (Favret
2009). M. abietinus may cause
serious damage or kill young shoots, or cause deformation and loss of needles
(Klein 1983). During heavy infestations many nymphs may fall onto non-hosts
in the forest undergrowth, often reaching the adult stage on them (Naumann Etienne
& Remaudičre 1995). 2n=12. Mindarus
guatemalensis Favret & Nielsen Appearance in life is not described, but
probably similar to M. abietinus;
BL not recorded. On Abies guatemalensis
on Guatemala, causing significant feeding damage, particularly by
distortion of growing shoots (Favret & Nielson 2008). Mindarus
japonicus Takahashi
(fig. 15C)
Apterae
are not described, but probably similar in life to M. abietinus. BL of alata is
c. 2 mm (Takahashi 1931). On Abies spp., and also recorded from Cephalotaxa drupacea. An ovipara from Abies firma is illustrated by Quednau (2010). The male genitalia were described and
illustrated by Wieczorek et al.
(2012). In
east Asia (India, Nepal, east Siberia, Japan, Korea, China). Mindarus
keteleerifoliae Zhang
Appearance in life is unknown.
Described from shoots of Keteleeria
evelyniana in Yunnan, China (Zhang & Zhong 1984). Also recorded from Cunninghamia sp., and from Picea
sp. (as M. piceasuctus Zhang &
Qiao 1997d; synonymy by Quednau 2010). Alatae have secondary rhinaria
distributed III 14-22, IV 0-5. The
complete mitochondrial genome of this species has been published (Y.Wang et al. 2015). Mindarus
kinseyi Voegtlin
Apterae are pale green covered with light wax, increasing with age,
when posterior and marginal regions may extrude long wax filaments; BL
1.1-2.3 mm. Alatae have variably developed dorsal abdominal sclerotic
cross-bands. Small (BL 0.7-1.0 mm) yellow-gold oviparae and blue to
blue-green dwarf apterous males (BL 0.5-0.7 mm) are produced in June through
to autumn, but populations also continue to reproduce parthenogenetically
through the summer and into autumn. On
Abies concolor in California
(Sierra Nevada), and also found on this host in eastern Canada (Quednau
2010). A
record from Turkey (Şenol et al. 2014b) is likely to be based on a
misidentification. Voegtlin (1995) described all morphs
and Ehler & Kinsey (1995) provided a detailed account. Mindarus
obliquus (Cholodkovsky)
Apterae are yellowish green, covered in white wax wool; BL 1.2-1.9
mm. Alatae are similar to those of M. abietinus, but smaller (BL 1.0-1.6
mm); differences between the two species were described by Carter &
Eastop (1973). On Picea spp. (engelmannii,
glauca, sitchensis, but not abies),
feeding between needles on new shoots in spring, but without deforming
needles. In Europe, east to Turkey (or
China), Canada and Alaska (BMNH collection).
Presumably, on account of the host species colonised, M. obliquus is of nearctic origin. The
life cycle is like that of M. abietinus,
with small apterous sexuales in June-September. 2n=12, according to Robinson
& Chen (1969), but a sample from P.
glauca in British Columbia, Canada (leg. C.K. Chan) had 2n=8 (R.L.
Blackman; unpublished data), indicating that there may be more than one
species on Picea in Canada. Mindarus
pinicola (Thomas)
Balsam Twig Aphid Appearance in life and biology are
essentially as in M. abietinus,
with which it has been long confused in the North American literature.
Voegtlin (1995) observed that fundatrices and their apterous progeny of North
American populations always had more wax glands than European populations and
suggested that these records may all apply to a native species. He also noted
that fundatrices produced a much
greater proportion of apterous progeny than the European species. The
separate identity of the aphid on native American Abies (balsamea, fraseri, grandis) was then confirmed by Favret (2009) using multiple morphometric
analysis of forewing characters, and the name pinicola was reinstated. This is therefore the aphid studied
under the name abietinus by various
workers in North America, e.g. Amman (1963; natural enemies in North
Carolina), Saunders (1969; damage and control), Bradbury & Osgood (1986;
chemical control), Mattson et al.
(1989; increased susceptibility of infested trees to spruce budworm), Fondren
et al. (2004; biological control by
predators), and Doherty et al. (2017;
possible effects of global warming). Mindarus
remaudierei Voegtlin Appearance in life is unrecorded; BL of
aptera 2.0-2.4 mm. On Abies religiosa in
Mexico (Voegtlin 1995). Quednau (2010) illustrated an ovipara collected in
mid-April. Mindarus
victoria Essig (fig. 15A) Apterae are a soft, jade-green, covered with
thick white wax wool; BL c. 1.9 mm.
Alatae green, wax-covered, with narrow dark dorsal abdominal
cross-bands; BL c. 2.5 mm. On shoot
tips of Abies grandis in British
Columbia, Canada. Oviparae and very
small dusky apterous males occur in June.
Essig (1939) described and illustrated all the morphs.
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