The Aphids
SYSTEMATIC TREATMENT OF APHID GENERA
(in alphabetical order)
W
Wahlgreniella Hille Ris Lambers |
Aphidinae: Macrosiphini |
About six species with elongate swollen siphunculi, cauda with only 5 hairs and apterae often without rhinaria on ANT
III. One species utilizes Arbutus as secondary hosts.They are mostly of boreal distribution and associated with
Rosa and/or Ericaceae, their biology thus being like that of
Ericaphis which are probably their closest relatives.
Accounts are available for western Europe (Hille Ris Lambers 1949,
Heie, 1995) and
Wahlgreniella empetri Richards Apterae are dull green with dusky appendages; BL 1.5-1.8 mm. Alatae have dark brown to black head, antennae and thorax. On Empetrum nigrum in northern Canada (Baffin Island).
Wahlgreniella lampeli Rupais Apterae are shining
lemon-yellow; BL 2.1-2.6 mm. On Empetrum hermaphroditum in
northern Russia (
Wahlgreniella nervata (Gillette) Plate 24d Apterae are spindle-shaped, pale yellow-green to dull mid-green,
with dark-ringed antennae and dark tips to the long, slightly
swollen siphunculi (see influentialpoints.com/Gallery); BL 1.4-2.5 mm. Alatae have a green abdomen with variably
developed dark dorsal cross-bands, sometimes coalesced into an
irregular patch. In western North America it is apparently
host-alternating between Rosa and Ericaceae (Arbutus, Arctostaphylos, Pieris), although the host alternation still awaits proper experimental
verification. Introduced populations on roses occur in Central and South America,
Europe, Saudi Arabia (Hussain et al. 2015), Turkey, Iran
(Rezwani 2001),
Wahlgreniella ossiannilssoni Hille Ris Lambers Apterae are
shining pale yellow, dark green, reddish brown or greenish black,
with siphunculi dark in middle and at tips; BL 1.5-2.3 mm. On
undersides of leaves and shoots of Arctostaphylos uva-ursi.
Boreo-alpine in distribution (northern Europe, Balkans,
Wahlgreniella vaccinii (Theobald) (Fig.56e) Apterae are shining greenish yellow or yellowish green, and have
antennae ringed with black; BL 1.6-2.3 mm. On the undersides of
leaves of Vaccinium spp. in
Wahgreniella viburni (Takahashi) Apterae are green, with tips of siphunculi dusky; BL c.2 mm. Alatae have secondary rhinaria distributed III c.45, IV 8-10, V 0-3. It was described from alatae found in Taiwan collected on young leaves of Viburnum arboricola (= V. odoratissimum var. iwabuki), but apterae and alatae of apparently the same species were collected on Mahonia morrisonensis (= M. oiwakensis), so the true host is in doubt. An association with Mahonia would indicate that this species may belong in Liosomaphis, and is possibly synonymous with L. himalayensis.
Wanyucallis Quednau |
Calaphidinae: Myzocallidini |
One species in
Wanyucallis amblyopappos (Zhang & Zhang) Only apterae are
known, collected on Quercus liaotungensis in
Watabura Matsumura (? = Prociphilus Koch) |
Eriosomatinae: Pemphigini |
A genus for one species in east Asia which probably alternates between Maloideae and Pinus roots, although so far only known from the alate sexupara. It may be a small species of Prociphilus.
Watabura nishiyae Matsumura This species was described from alate ?sexuparae collected on Cydonia in Japan (Matsumura 1917). Sexuparae that appear to be the same species have subsequently been collected from roots of Pinus spp. (densiflora, thunbergii) in Japan (BMNH collection, leg D. Hille Ris Lambers), and from twigs and branches of a cultivated Malus sp. in Korea (BMNH collection, leg. V. F. Eastop). The sexuparae are small (BL 1.3-1.9 mm), wax-dusted in life (V.F. Eastop, unpublished observation), with secondary rhinaria distributed III 11-16, IV 4-10, V 5-10, VI 3-9. The spring generations on Malus and the apterous exules on Pinus roots have not been described. This species was confused in the literature for many years with Aphidounguis mali, and records of Watabura nishiyae from Ulmacaeae and roots of Malus apply to that species.
Weibanaphis Zhang, Chen, Zhong & Li |
Aphidinae: Aphidini |
One species in
Weibanaphis alhagis Zhang, Chen, Zhong & Li Colour
of apterae in life is unrecorded, presumably dark or with extensive
dark dorsal markings; BL c.2..4 mm. On Alhagi sparsifolia in