identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03BE3D79FFE5D421FF53FE59FAFF28D5.text	03BE3D79FFE5D421FF53FE59FAFF28D5.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Coccus cambodiensis Takahashi 1942	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Coccus cambodiensis Takahashi, 1942</p>
            <p>(Figs 1 and 2)</p>
            <p> The species is known from Kampuchea (García-Morales et al. 2016; Ali 1971) and Hainan Province, China (Tang 1991) on  Ficus retusa (Moraceae) . Tang (1991) remarked that it is morphologically close to  P. acutissimus , the type species of the monotypic genus  Prococcus . </p>
            <p>Diagnosis based on Takahashi (1942) and Tang (1991): Body of adult female narrow, elongate to elongate oval, pointed at anterior and posterior ends, 2.0– 2.5 mm long, 1.0– 1.7 mm wide; young insects in life yellow. Dorsum with derm slightly sclerotized in older females, with well-developed dermal areolations; setae cylindrical with bluntly rounded apices; dorsal tubular ducts absent; submarginal tubercles numbering 14 around body; preopercular pores in an elongate group anterior to anal plates; anal plates each triangular, together quadrate, length of posterior margin almost equal to anterior margin; each plate with 1 subdiscal seta and 2 or 3 apical setae. Marginal setae slender with pointed apices; stigmatic spines numbering 3, median spine longest, straight or slightly curved, cylindrical with a bluntly pointed or rounded apex; lateral spines conical with rounded apices. Venter with antennae reduced to 2 or 3 segments each, mostly 2 (2 segments shown in Takahashi’s (1942) illustration—see Fig. 2 and description and Tang’s (1991) description, but 3 segments shown in his illustration—see Fig. 1); inter-antennal setae absent or numbering 2 pairs (text in Tang (1991) says they are absent, but his illustration shows 2 pairs of short setae—see Fig. 1); submarginal setae present; long pregenital setae numbering 3 pairs; legs reduced, with tibio-tarsus fused, claw digitules usually not discernible; ventral tubular ducts absent; multilocular disc pores very few, present anterior to anal opening, but their frequency and number of loculi are neither mentioned nor illustrated by either Takahashi (1942) or Tang (1991); abdominal segmentation obscure.</p>
            <p> Comments.  Coccus cambodiensis differs from  P. acutissimus as follows (character-states for  P. acutissimus given in brackets): (i) body tapering at both ends, each end rounded (tapering at both ends, each end more-or-less pointed); (ii) dorsal derm with numerous areolations (small round or oval clear areas present on the dorsum (Gill et al. 1977 )); (iii) dorsal setae slender and cylindrical with bluntly rounded apices (robust, spine like and slightly tapering with pointed or blunt apices); (iv) claw digitules not discernable, possibly absent (claw digitules unequal, with 1 thick and 1 thin); (v) antennae mainly 2 segmented (mainly 3 segmented); and (vi) inter-antennal setae absent (2 pairs of inter-antennal setae present between antennal bases). </p>
            <p> Based on the shared morphological characters listed above,  C. cambodiensis is obviously much closer to  P. acutissimus than to  C. hesperidum , the type species of  Coccus . It is here considered to be congeneric with  P. acutissimus , and is transferred to the genus  Prococcus as  Prococcus cambodiensis (Takahashi, 1942) ,  comb. n.</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE3D79FFE5D421FF53FE59FAFF28D5	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cao, Tong;Watson, Gillian W.;Hodgson, Chris J.;Jing, Qi;Feng, Ji-Nian	Cao, Tong, Watson, Gillian W., Hodgson, Chris J., Jing, Qi, Feng, Ji-Nian (2022): The genera Coccus and Prococcus (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) in China with two new combinations and descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 5087 (1): 112-128, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5087.1.5
03BE3D79FFE5D425FF53F9E6FCF02FC1.text	03BE3D79FFE5D425FF53F9E6FCF02FC1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Coccus cameronensis Takahashi 1952	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Coccus cameronensis Takahashi, 1952</p>
            <p>(Fig. 3)</p>
            <p> Material examined. Type series: 2 adult females on 1 slide (NHMUK). Lectotype (here designated) + paralectotype. Top label:  Coccus / cameron- / ensis / Takah. Lower label:  Coccus / acutissimus / Green, subsp. / 29.ix.1944 / Cameron / Highlands / R. Takahashi. [Takahashi (1952) states that the specimens were collected on an undetermined tree.] </p>
            <p>Notes: The lectotype is the specimen nearest to the small round label with “Type” on it. Both specimens have been attacked by fungus and each has a parasitoid exit hole centrally (marked X in figure). Both specimens have lost all the ventral surface except for a narrow marginal area. The line in the figure (marked Y) indicates the extent of the venter – thus all the more central structures, such as mouthparts, limbs and spiracles and other ventral dermal structures, are missing. It is thought likely that, when the parasitoids pupated within the scales, each glued the venter of the scale to the substrate; consequently, the ventral cuticle was left behind when the scales were collected.</p>
            <p>Description of slide-mounted adult female (Fig. 3): Body very elongate and narrow, slightly banana-shaped and rather pointed at each end, 6.5‒7.0 mm long and 1.6‒1.8 mm at widest point. Anal cleft 0.9 mm long. Stigmatic clefts small (compared with size of insect) but distinct. Dorsum with well-spaced areolations, these perhaps more abundant medially. Eyespots displaced onto dorsum, situated well away from margin.</p>
            <p>Dorsum mildly sclerotised but with an elongate area of darker sclerotization medially, and on either side of anal cleft just posterior to anal plates. Dorsal setae spinose, strongly conical and sharply pointed, often with a slightly bent apex; largest (about 20‒25 um long) in a paired series of more-or-less discrete groups, with 3 groups on head (frequency taken from lectotype specimen) (anteriormost single (medial) group, I, 2 setae; paired groups: II, 0 or 1 each; more or less level with eyespots, III, 2 or 4 setae each); thorax with 3 group pairs (IV, with 5 or 7 setae each; V, with 7 or 9 each; and just anterior to posterior stigmatic cleft, VI, with 12 or 14 setae each), and abdomen with 5 group pairs (VII, each with 7 or 8 setae each; VIII, with 6 each; IX, with 6 each; X, with 5 or 6 each; and XI with 1 or 2 setae each, just anterior to anal plates). Dorsal spinose setae also present in a sparse submarginal band, these often smaller, down to about 11‒12 um long. Each areolation containing a small micropore, each about 1 um wide. Dorsum also with a slightly larger dark pore type with an inner ductule, the latter quite broad and tubular near pore, then narrowing abruptly to a fine filament with a small glandular end; fairly frequent throughout (referred to as tubular pore in Fig. 3 caption). Preopercular pores present just anterior to anal plates, each about 2.5‒3.0 um wide and probably bulbous; number uncertain but probably 4 or 5. Tubular ducts and submarginal tubercles absent. Anal plates quadrate, with anterolateral margins shorter than posterolateral margins; plate length 295‒310 um, combined widths 340 um; each plate with a setose discal seta, about 105 um long; other setae unclear but each plate perhaps with a fine apical seta. Setae along anterior and lateral margin of anal fold not visible (possibly absent).</p>
            <p>Margin. Marginal setae of 2 sizes: (i) very large setose setae in a group anteriorly on head and on either side of anal cleft; with 4 near head apex, each 60‒120 um long, and with a single moderate-length seta situated slightly further back, each 40‒60 um long; also with 4 or 5 similar setae on either side of anal cleft, each 35‒80 um long; and (ii) rather fine setae that generally curve posteriorly, each 16‒20 um long; very sparse, distributed on each side as follows: between head apex to about level with eyespot 0, between eyespots and anterior stigmatic cleft 7 or 8; between stigmatic clefts 6‒10; on side of abdomen 12‒17 (but see under submarginal setae below). Stigmatic clefts quite small but distinct and quite deep, each with 3 fairly blunt, spinose stigmatic setae; median spines often bent, each 16‒20 um long; lateral setae small, each 8‒10 um long.</p>
            <p>Venter. Only two ventral features could be discerned. Submarginal setae very short, each straight and about 5 um long, set very close to margin and easily mistaken for marginal setae; very sparse, with perhaps 4 on each side between stigmatic clefts. Spiracular disc pores present, occasionally visible near each stigmatic cleft, each with 5 loculi.</p>
            <p>Comments. It is not surprising that Takahashi could not see the antennae and legs, as almost all of the venter is missing. The above description differs slightly from the brief description given by Takahashi in that there appear to be more groups of dorsal spinose setae than he mentioned.</p>
            <p> The absence of the venter makes a discussion of the taxonomic relationships of this species difficult. Outwardly,  C. cameronensis is much more similar to  P. acutissimus than to  C. hesperidum Linnaeus (the type species of  Coccus ). However, the presence in  P. cameronensis of: (i) very large marginal setae anteriorly and posteriorly, (ii) a discal seta on each anal plate, (iii) the shape and distribution of the dorsal setae, and (iv) the absence of submarginal tubercles all suggest that its relationship to  P. acutissimus is not close.  Prococcus cameronensis also differs in having (character-states for  C. acutissimus given in brackets): (i) dorsal setae clustered into about 11 submarginal groups on each side of body (evenly distributed over dorsum); (ii) dorsal setae slender, spinose, pointed, and slightly curved distally (robust and slightly tapering with bluntly rounded apices, and straight). Despite these differences,  C. cameronensis is here thought to be closer to  P. acutissimus than to  C. hesperidum and is here transferred to  Prococcus as  Prococcus cameronensis (Takahashi, 1952) ,  comb. n.</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE3D79FFE5D425FF53F9E6FCF02FC1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cao, Tong;Watson, Gillian W.;Hodgson, Chris J.;Jing, Qi;Feng, Ji-Nian	Cao, Tong, Watson, Gillian W., Hodgson, Chris J., Jing, Qi, Feng, Ji-Nian (2022): The genera Coccus and Prococcus (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) in China with two new combinations and descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 5087 (1): 112-128, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5087.1.5
03BE3D79FFE1D425FF53FC40FA8328C9.text	03BE3D79FFE1D425FF53FC40FA8328C9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Prococcus Avasthi 1993	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Genus  Prococcus Avasthi 1993</p>
            <p> Type species.  Prococcus acutissimus (Green, 1896) . </p>
            <p>Avasthi 1993: 73.</p>
            <p> Revised generic diagnosis of adult female (based on  P. acutissimus ,  P. cambodiensis (Takahashi, 1942) comb. n. and  P. cameronensis (Takahashi, 1952) comb. n. ) Body slender, narrowly elongate oval or slightly curved, with anterior and posterior ends more-or-less pointed. Dorsum. Derm slightly or strongly sclerotized, dermal areolations or reticulations sometimes becoming well developed in older females. Dorsal setae slender, spinose and pointed, or cylindrical or robust and slightly tapering with bluntly rounded apices. Dorsal tubular ducts absent. Submarginal tubercles present. Preopercular pores numerous, situated anterior to anal plates. Anal plates triangular, together quadrate, each with a discal or subdiscal seta. Eye-spots situated on submargin. Margin. Marginal setae slender with pointed apices. Each stigmatic cleft shallow, usually containing 3 spinose stigmatic spines, occasionally only 1, median spine with bluntly pointed or rounded apex, slender or curved, lateral spines with rounded apices. Venter. Antennae reduced, each with 2‒5 segments. Inter-antennal setae present or absent; long pregenital setae numbering 3 pairs; submarginal setae present. Legs reduced or even invisible, tibio-tarsal articulation imperfect, fused or articulated; claw digitules unequal (with 1 thick and 1 thin) or possibly absent. Ventral tubular ducts absent. </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE3D79FFE1D425FF53FC40FA8328C9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cao, Tong;Watson, Gillian W.;Hodgson, Chris J.;Jing, Qi;Feng, Ji-Nian	Cao, Tong, Watson, Gillian W., Hodgson, Chris J., Jing, Qi, Feng, Ji-Nian (2022): The genera Coccus and Prococcus (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) in China with two new combinations and descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 5087 (1): 112-128, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5087.1.5
03BE3D79FFE1D424FF53F981FE1D2F52.text	03BE3D79FFE1D424FF53F981FE1D2F52.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Prococcus acutissimus (Green 1896)	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Prococcus acutissimus (Green, 1896)</p>
            <p> Material examined.   CHINA, Yunnan Province:  Menglun , 19.v.2012, coll. Wang Fang, 1 slide, 1 adult ♀  ;   Tengchong , 6.v.2012, coll. Wang Fang, 1 slide, 2 adult ♀♀  ;   Mengla , 21.v.2012, on  Cycas revoluta (Cycadaceae), coll. Wang Fang, 1 slide, 1 adult ♀  . </p>
            <p>Diagnosis (based on observed specimens, and descriptions and illustrations by Hamon &amp; Williams (1984) and Tang (1991)). Adult female body very elongate and extremely narrow, 2.5–5.5 mm long, 1.0–2.0 mm wide, fresh insects creamy-white to yellowish green, older females reddish brown to black. Dorsum with derm strongly sclerotized in older females, with small round or oval clear areas (areolations) present; dorsal setae robust, spine like and slightly tapering with pointed or bluntly rounded apices; tubular ducts absent; submarginal tubercles numbering 8– 19 around dorsum; preopercular pores numbering 8–13, situated anterior to anal plates; anal plates each triangular, together quadrate, posterolateral margin slightly longer than anterolateral margin, bearing 1 subdiscal seta, 3 apical setae; anogenital fold with 2 pairs of anterior margin setae, and 2 pairs of lateral marginal setae. Margin with marginal setae slender with pointed apices; each stigmatic cleft containing 3 spines, median spine 3–4 times as long as a lateral spine, both cylindrical with bluntly rounded apices. Venter with antennae reduced, each with 3 segments, occasionally 5; 2 pairs of inter-antennal setae present; submarginal setae present; long pregenital setae numbering 3 pairs; legs reduced, tibio-tarsal articulations fused; claw digitules unequal, with 1 thick and 1 thin; multilocular disc pores each primarily with 7 loculi, occasionally with 5–8 loculi, present around genital area and on preceding 2 or 3 abdominal segments; and ventral tubular ducts absent.</p>
            <p> Host plants. Recorded from members of 42 genera belonging to 29 families (García-Morales et al. 2016). For Chinese records,  Mangifera indica (Anacardiaceae) ,  Syzygium jambos (Myrtaceae) (Tang 1991) and  Cycas revoluta (Cycadaceae) . </p>
            <p>Distribution. Recorded from all zoogeographical regions (García-Morales et al. 2016), including 12 provinces and regions in China (Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hainan, Hong Kong, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Sichuan, Taiwan, Yunnan and Zhejiang).</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE3D79FFE1D424FF53F981FE1D2F52	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cao, Tong;Watson, Gillian W.;Hodgson, Chris J.;Jing, Qi;Feng, Ji-Nian	Cao, Tong, Watson, Gillian W., Hodgson, Chris J., Jing, Qi, Feng, Ji-Nian (2022): The genera Coccus and Prococcus (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) in China with two new combinations and descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 5087 (1): 112-128, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5087.1.5
03BE3D79FFE0D424FF53FD62FA522EA4.text	03BE3D79FFE0D424FF53FD62FA522EA4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Coccus Linnaeus 1758	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Key to separate adult females of  Coccus from  Prococcus</p>
            <p> 1(0) Body elongate with tapering to narrow apices. Legs shorter than antennae, with reduced segmentation (tibio-tarsal articulation usually missing). Antenna 2–5 segmented. Anal plates each with a discal or subdiscal seta. Preopercular pores present..................................................................................................  Prococcus</p>
            <p> - Body usually subcircular to elongate-oval, with apices rarely narrow. Legs usually as long as antennae, with segmentation fully developed, with or without a tibio-tarsal articulation. Antenna 3–8 segmented. Anal plates each with or without a discal or subdiscal seta. Preopercular pores present or absent.....................................................  Coccus</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE3D79FFE0D424FF53FD62FA522EA4	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cao, Tong;Watson, Gillian W.;Hodgson, Chris J.;Jing, Qi;Feng, Ji-Nian	Cao, Tong, Watson, Gillian W., Hodgson, Chris J., Jing, Qi, Feng, Ji-Nian (2022): The genera Coccus and Prococcus (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) in China with two new combinations and descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 5087 (1): 112-128, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5087.1.5
03BE3D79FFE0D424FF53FABFFC8F2AC7.text	03BE3D79FFE0D424FF53FABFFC8F2AC7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Coccus Linnaeus 1758	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Genus  Coccus Linnaeus, 1758</p>
            <p> Type-species.  Coccus hesperidum Linnaeus, 1758 . </p>
            <p>Takahashi, 1952: 11; De Lotto, 1957: 296; Hodgson, 1968: 114; Ben-Dov, 1981: 649; Avasthi &amp; Shafee, 1991: 329; Tang, 1991: 71; Hodgson &amp; Henderson, 2000: 195; Wang &amp; Feng, 2012: 59; Gavrilov-Zimin, 2013: 78; Lin et al. 2013: 249; Lin et al. 2017: 571; Choi &amp; Lee, 2018: 121; Gullan et al. 2018: 1; Łagowska &amp; Hodgson, 2019: 373.</p>
            <p>Generic diagnosis of adult female. Body broadly oval to very elongate oval, or pyriform. Dorsum. Derm with or without sclerotized reticulations; if present, dermal areolations often becoming well developed in older females. Dorsal setae spinose, setose or conical, with pointed or bluntly rounded apices, or cylindrical or capitate, with bluntly rounded apices. Submarginal tubercles present or absent. Dorsal tubular ducts and preopercular pores present or absent. Anal plates triangular, together quadrate, each with or without a single discal seta or clustered discal setae. Margin. Marginal setae slender, straight or curved, spinose with pointed apices, or with tips bifid, frayed, fimbriate or branched. Each stigmatic cleft containing one, three or more spinose stigmatic spines. Venter. Antennae each with 3‒8 segments. Inter-antennal setae present or absent; one to three pairs of long pregenital setae present; submarginal setae present or absent. Legs well developed, tibio-tarsal articulation sometimes freely articulated, with or without a well-developed articulatory sclerosis; occasionally, tibio-tarsal articulation imperfect; claw with or without a denticle. Ventral tubular ducts present or absent.</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE3D79FFE0D424FF53FABFFC8F2AC7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cao, Tong;Watson, Gillian W.;Hodgson, Chris J.;Jing, Qi;Feng, Ji-Nian	Cao, Tong, Watson, Gillian W., Hodgson, Chris J., Jing, Qi, Feng, Ji-Nian (2022): The genera Coccus and Prococcus (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) in China with two new combinations and descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 5087 (1): 112-128, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5087.1.5
03BE3D79FFEFD429FF53FF5DFB5E2AB7.text	03BE3D79FFEFD429FF53FF5DFB5E2AB7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Coccus nanningensis Cao & Watson & Hodgson & Jing & Feng 2022	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Coccus nanningensis Cao &amp; Feng ,  sp. n.</p>
            <p>(Figs 4 and 5)</p>
            <p> Material examined.   Holotype adult ♀: CHINA, Guangxi Province: label: Nanning, Guangxi Province, China / Guangxi University of Finance and Economics / 10.viii.2019 on  Ficus carica (Moraceae) / Cao Tong (NWAFU) /  Coccus nanningensis Cao &amp; Feng ; holotype on the left side, circled  .  Paratypes ♀♀: 1 adult female on the same slide with holotype, in the lower right corner, plus 1 slide with 2 adult females, and another 2 slides each with 3 adult females, collection data same as holotype (NWAFU). All the slide labels (Fig. 5) are written in Chinese . </p>
            <p>Description (data taken from all 10 specimens)</p>
            <p>Adult female in life. Body oval to subcircular, yellowish-brown to pale brown, with symmetrical dark spot present on dorsum.</p>
            <p>Slide-mounted adult female. Body elongate oval to broadly oval; 1.5–2.0 mm long, 1.0– 1.5 mm wide. Anal cleft approximately 1/7–1/6 of body length.</p>
            <p>Dorsum. Derm with small circular clear cell-like areolations distributed over entire dorsum, becoming well developed on older females. Dorsal microducts present singly in areolations. Setae setose, fine and pointed, each with a well-developed basal socket, scattered, each about 8–13 μm long. Submarginal tubercles present on anterior half of body only (with 1 or 2 on each side, numbering 0‒2 between anterior stigmatic clefts on head, 0 or 1 between anterior and posterior stigmatic clefts on each side), absent from abdominal region. Dorsal tubular ducts absent. Preopercular pores absent. Anal plates each triangular, together quadrate, 111–144 μm long, 82–92 μm wide, width of anal plates together slightly longer than their length, anterolateral margin 108–114 μm long, posterolateral margin 109–119 μm long, length of posterior margin almost equal to anterior margin, outer angle slightly obtuse; each plate with a well-developed supporting bar, and a robust discal seta with a pointed apex, 41–57 μm long; also 3 apical setae, each 15–17 μm long.Anogenital fold with 3 pairs of anterior margin setae, each 51–63 μm long, and 3 pairs of lateral marginal setae, each 41–68 μm long. Anal ring subcircular, bearing 8 anal ring setae. Eyespots not found.</p>
            <p>Margin. Marginal setae lengths variable, 22–67 μm long, in 1 or 2 rows, with well-developed basal sockets, structure highly varied, mostly rather long and extremely robust, but some with apices branched or bifurcate, others either conical, straight or curved with pointed apices (hard to distinguish from the stigmatic spine), or with apices swollen, sagittate or spatulate, or setose, extremely slender, fine and sharply pointed; with 39–45 setae between anterior stigmatic clefts, 10–12 setae on each side between anterior and posterior stigmatic clefts, and 22–25 setae between the posterior stigmatic cleft and anal cleft. Stigmatic clefts shallow but distinct, each cleft containing 3 slender, tapering and bluntly spinose stigmatic spines, with well-developed basal sockets; median spine longest, 108–126 μm long, about 2.5–6.5 times as long as a lateral spine, each 21–47 μm long; (one specimen with one cleft containing 1 stigmatic spine, this only as long as a normal lateral spine).</p>
            <p>Venter. Derm membranous. Antennae each with 7 segments, total antennal length 355–383 μm, segment III longest, 79–83 μm long; lengths of other segments in μm: I, 46–54; II, 42–45; IV, 54–71; V, 33–37; VI, 32–39; and VII, 61–81. Setal distribution on antenna: scape 3; pedicel 2; III, 0; IV, 2 or 3; V &amp; VI, each segment with 1 fleshy seta and 1 hair-like seta; VII with 3 fleshy setae, 3 stiff setae and 2 hair-like setae. Inter-antennal setae numbering 3 or 4 pairs, comprising 1 pair of long outer setae, each 64–66 μm long, and 2 or 3 pairs of short inner setae, each 11–15 μm long. Long pregenital setae numbering 2 pairs (1 specimen with 3 pregenital setae on one side but other side with only 2, a total of 5 setae on 3 segments), each seta 79–83 μm long. Other ventral setae setose, fine, sparsely distributed over entire venter, each seta 9–17 μm long. Submarginal setae not observed. Legs well developed, each with a tibio-tarsal articulation but no articulatory sclerosis; tibia 115–122 μm long, longer than tarsus; tarsus 85–97 μm long. Claw without a denticle; claw digitules similar, each broad and expanded at apex, about 30–31 μm long. Tarsal digitules longer than claw digitules, slender, knobbed, expanded at apex, each about 44–50 μm long. Spiracles normal, without sclerotic plates. Spiracular disc pores mostly each with 5 loculi in outer ring, occasionally 4 or 6; spiracular pore bands narrow, each 2 or 3 rows wide. Anterior spiracular pore band with 15–23 pores, posterior spiracular pore band with 20–33 pores. Multilocular disc pores each primarily with 7 loculi, occasionally with 8‒10, restricted to genital area (segment VII). Ventral tubular ducts absent.</p>
            <p> Etymology. The species epithet  nanningensis is formed from the name of the place where this new species was collected, i.e., the city of Nanning, combined with the Latin suffix - ensis, meaning ‘from’. </p>
            <p> Host plant. The species was collected from the leaves of  Ficus carica L. </p>
            <p>Distribution. CHINA: Guangxi Province.</p>
            <p> Comments. The adult female of  C. nanningensis sp. n. is morphologically similar to two African species,  C. inyangombae Hodgson, 1967 and  C. sordidus De Lotto, 1957 , both of which also lack tubular ducts from both dorsum and venter, and have marginal setae mostly with branched or fimbriate apices. </p>
            <p> The new species can be separated from  C. inyangombae as follows (data for  C. inyangombae from Hodgson (1967) given in brackets): (i) dorsal setae setose, extremely fine and pointed, sparsely scattered (robust and pointed, quite numerous); (ii) anal plates each with a robust discal seta with pointed apex (without discal setae); (iii) anogenital fold with 6 anterior margin setae (with 4 anterior margin setae); (iv) marginal setae mainly rather long and highly variable in structure, some with apices branched or bifurcate; some conical, straight or curved with apices pointed; some with apices swollen, sagittate or spatulate; some setose, slender, fine and sharply pointed, but mostly without fimbriate apices (all rather long with fimbriate apices); (v) marginal setae between anterior and posterior stigmatic clefts numbering 10‒12 on each side (5‒7 on each side); (vi) antenna with 7 segments (with 8 segments); and (vii) pregenital setae mainly numbering 2 pairs (3 pairs). </p>
            <p> Coccus nanningensis sp. n. can be separated from  C. sordidus as follows (data for  C. sordidus from De Lotto (1957) given in brackets): (i) body oval to subcircular, 1.5–2.0 mm long, 1.0– 1.5 mm wide (elongate and asymmetric, up to 5.2 mm long and up to 3.7 mm wide); (ii) anal plates each with a robust discal seta with a pointed apex (without discal setae); (iii) anogenital fold with 6 anterior margin setae (with 4 anterior margin setae); (iv) marginal setae mainly rather long and highly variable in structure, some with apices branched or bifurcate; some conical, straight or curved with apices pointed; some with apices swollen, sagittate or spatulate; some setose, slender, fine and sharply pointed, but mostly without fimbriate apices (all rather long with slightly fimbriate apices); (v) antenna with 7 segments (with 8 segments); (vi) pregenital setae mostly numbering 2 pairs (3 pairs); (vii) leg without a tibiotarsal articulatory sclerosis (with a tibio-tarsal articulatory sclerosis); and (viii) multilocular disc pores restricted to genital area only (resent around genital area and on preceding 2 or 3 abdominal segments). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE3D79FFEFD429FF53FF5DFB5E2AB7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cao, Tong;Watson, Gillian W.;Hodgson, Chris J.;Jing, Qi;Feng, Ji-Nian	Cao, Tong, Watson, Gillian W., Hodgson, Chris J., Jing, Qi, Feng, Ji-Nian (2022): The genera Coccus and Prococcus (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) in China with two new combinations and descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 5087 (1): 112-128, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5087.1.5
03BE3D79FFECD42FFF53FF5DFD942AEE.text	03BE3D79FFECD42FFF53FF5DFD942AEE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Coccus cephalotaxus Cao & Watson & Hodgson & Jing & Feng 2022	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Coccus cephalotaxus Cao &amp; Feng ,  sp. n.</p>
            <p>(Figs 5 and 6)</p>
            <p> Material examined.   Holotype adult ♀: CHINA: label: Museum Garden, Yangling, Shannxi Province, China / 17.iii.2017 on Cephalotaxus  sinensis (Taxaceae) / Cao Tong, Zhang Na (NWAFU) /  Coccus cephalotaxus Cao &amp; Feng , holotype in the middle and circled  .  Paratypes ♀♀: 2 adult females on the same slide with holotype, in the upper left and right corners, plus 1 slide with 5 specimens and another 2 slides each with 1 specimen; collection data same as holotype (NWAFU). All the slide labels (Fig. 5) are written in Chinese . </p>
            <p>Description (data taken from all 10 specimens)</p>
            <p>Adult female in life. Body asymmetric, very elongate, long and narrow, dorsum with a longitudinal ridge and transverse wrinkles; yellowish-brown to fulvous, mature adult females are slightly darker.</p>
            <p>Slide-mounted adult female. Mounted specimens asymmetric and very elongate, narrow anteriorly, broadest in posterior abdomen; body 3‒4 times as long as greatest width, 2.7–4.8 mm long, 1.0– 1.5 mm wide. Anal cleft approximately 1/10–1/7 of body length.</p>
            <p>Dorsum. Derm with small circular cell-like areolations distributed over entire dorsum, these becoming more pronounced on older females. Dorsal microducts present singly in each areolation. Setae small, either conical and spinose with sharply pointed apices, or slightly cylindrical with bluntly rounded apices, each with a well-developed basal socket, scattered; each about 9.7–11.2 μm long. Submarginal tubercles symmetrically arranged, with 4 or 5 on each side (2 to 4 between anterior stigmatic clefts on head and, each side, with 1 between anterior and posterior stigmatic clefts, and 1‒3 between each posterior stigmatic cleft and anal cleft). Dorsal tubular ducts absent. Preopercular pores small and circular, a group of 4‒6 present anterior to anal plates. Anal plates each triangular, together quadrate, 293–312 μm long, 112–128 μm wide, anterolateral margin slightly concave, 165–184 μm long, posterolateral margin slightly concave, 200–220 μm long, posterior margin longer than anterior margin, outer angle slightly obtuse; each plate with a well-developed supporting bar, and 4 or 5 apical setae.Anogenital fold with 2 pairs of anterior margin setae, each 94–107 μm long, and 3 pairs of lateral marginal setae, each 61–123 μm long. Anal ring subcircular, with 2 rows of translucent pores and 6 anal ring setae. Eyespots present on dorsal margin, each set in a paler circular area.</p>
            <p>Margin. Marginal setae each 28.9–43.2 μm long, with well-developed basal sockets, slender and straight, with apices either sharp, rather bluntly pointed or with apices bifurcate or branched; with 45–52 setae between anterior stigmatic clefts, and each side with 16–20 setae between anterior and posterior stigmatic clefts, and 45–55 setae between the posterior stigmatic cleft and anal cleft. Stigmatic clefts distinct, each cleft containing 3 slender spinose stigmatic spines, each tapered and blunt with a well-developed basal socket; median spine longest, 111–119 μm long, about 3‒4 times as long as a lateral spine, each 32–42 μm long.</p>
            <p>Venter. Derm membranous. Antennae each with 7 or 8 segments, with both antennal segment numbers about equally frequent (a few specimens even have 7- and 8-segmented antennae together on the same specimen). Total antennal length 508–557 μm; segments IV and V with pseudo-articulations when antenna 7 segmented, and segment IV longest, 105–132 μm long; lengths of other segments in μm: I, 54–67; II, 62–65; III, 75–93; V, 41–48; VI, 41–46; VII, 63–72. Setal distribution on 7-segmented antennae: scape 3; pedicel 2; III, 0; IV, 3; V &amp; VI, each segment with 1 fleshy seta and 1 hair-like seta; VII with 4 fleshy setae, 3 stiff setae and 1 hair-like seta. When antenna 8 segmented, segment III longest, 79–106 μm long; lengths of other segments in μm: I, 44–70; II, 61–71; VI, 46–70; V, 56–66; VI, 40–48; VII, 41–50; and VIII, 66–89. Setal distribution on 8-segmented antennae: scape 3; pedicel 2; III, 0; IV, 0; V, 3; VI &amp; VII, each segment with 1 fleshy seta and 1 hair-like seta; and VIII with 4 fleshy setae, 3 stiff setae and 1 hair-like seta. Two or 3 pairs of inter-antennal setae present, each seta 63–134 μm long. With 3 pairs of long pregenital setae, each 106–183 μm long. Other ventral setae setose and fine, each 9.2–18.5 μm long, sparsely distributed over entire venter, slightly denser on submarginal and genital areas and on preceding 3 abdominal segments; also near each coxa. Submarginal setae fine and pointed, each 9.2–11.2 μm long, in a sparse single row around body. Legs mostly well developed, each with a tibio-tarsal articulation; articulatory sclerosis rarely absent; tibia 215–230 μm long, longer than tarsus; tarsus 130.1–136.9 μm long; occasionally tibio-tarsal articulation imperfect (on 3 specimens). Claw without a denticle; claw digitules similar, each broad and expanded at apex, about 48–57 μm long. Tarsal digitules longer than claw digitules, slender, knobbed, expanded at apex, each about 72–83 μm long. Spiracles normal, without sclerotic plates. Spiracular disc pores mostly each with 5 loculi in the outer ring; spiracular pore bands narrow, each 2 or 3 rows wide, reaching medially beyond base of spiracular apodeme. Anterior spiracular pore band with 20–33 pores, posterior spiracular pore band with 24–43 pores. Multilocular disc pores each primarily with 10 loculi, occasionally with as few as 8, present around genital area and on preceding 1 or 2 abdominal segments. Ventral tubular ducts absent from most specimens, but one specimen with tubular ducts present in a group of 5 or 6 on each side between mesocoxa and median area of mesothorax; in another specimen, with 3 tubular ducts present near each mesocoxa; each ventral tubular duct with a relatively broad outer ductule and a narrow inner ductule with a flower-shaped terminal gland.</p>
            <p> Etymology. The species epithet  cephalotaxus is a masculine noun in apposition, referring to the host plant from which this new species was collected </p>
            <p> Host plant. The specimens were found pressed closely against veins on the leaves of Cephalotaxus  sinensis (Rehd. et Wils.) Li.</p>
            <p>Distribution. CHINA: Shannxi Province.</p>
            <p> Comments. Morphologically, adult female  C. cephalotaxus sp. n. are very similar to those of the Sri Lankan species,  C. ophiorrhizae (Green, 1896) . The two species share some distinct character-states: (i) antennae with seven or eight segments; (ii) multilocular disc pores each primarily with 10 loculi; (iii) anogenital fold with two pairs of anterior margin setae; (iv) anal ring with six anal ring setae; and (v) dorsal and ventral tubular ducts absent, though ventral tubular ducts occasionally present on  C. cephalotaxus sp. n. However, the new species can be separated from  C. ophiorrhizae as follows (data for  C. ophiorrhizae from Avasthi &amp; Shafee (1991) and Tang (1991) given in brackets): (i) marginal setae slender and straight, with apices either sharp or rather bluntly pointed, or bifurcate or branched (small and simple, with apices pointed); (ii) dorsal setae small, either conical and spinose with apices pointed or slightly cylindrical with apices bluntly rounded (small and cylindrical with apices rounded); (iii) preopercular pores present (absent); (iv) submarginal tubercles present in cephalic region (absent); (v) anogenital fold with 6 lateral margin setae (with 4 lateral margin setae); (vi) ventral setae distributed throughout, slightly denser on submarginal and genital areas, and with submarginal setae fine, in a single row (a few present on median area but submarginal setae absent); (vii) legs with a tibio-tarsal articulation, with or without an articulatory sclerosis; occasionally tibio-tarsal articulation imperfect (with a tibio-tarsal articulation and an articulatory sclerosis); (viii) ventral tubular ducts present or absent (ventral tubular ducts absent); and (ix) body asymmetric and very elongate, narrow anteriorly, broadest at posterior of abdomen (pointed at both ends, broadest at posterior stigmatic clefts). </p>
            <p> In addition, two other  Coccus species ,  C. longulus (Douglas, 1887) and the West African species  C. cajani (Newstead, 1917) both lack tubular ducts on both dorsum and venter, possess very elongate bodies and have a tibio-tarsal articulatory sclerosis like  C. cephalotaxus sp. n. Coccus cephalotaxus sp. n. can be separated from  C. longulus as follows (data for  C. longulus from Ben-Dov (1977) and Tang (1991) given in brackets): (i) anal plates each without a subdiscal seta (with a subdiscal seta); (ii) anogenital fold with 2 pairs of anterior margin setae and 6 anal ring setae (with 6 or 8 pairs of anterior margin setae, and 8 anal ring setae); (iii) dorsal setae small, either conical and spinose with pointed apices, or slightly cylindrical with bluntly rounded apices (flagellate and conspicuously curved, with apices pointed); (iv) multilocular disc pores each primarily with 10 loculi (each primarily with 7 loculi); (v) legs with a tibio-tarsal articulation, with or without an articulatory sclerosis; occasionally tibio-tarsal articulation imperfect (with a tibio-tarsal articulation and articulatory sclerosis); and (vi) ventral tubular ducts present or absent (ventral tubular ducts absent). </p>
            <p> Coccus cephalotaxus sp. n. can be separated from  C. cajani as follows (data for  C. cajani from Newstead (1917) and Łagowska &amp; Hodgson (2019) given in brackets): (i) marginal setae with apices sharp or rather bluntly pointed, or bifurcate or branched (with apices dilated and frayed); (ii) anal plates each without a subdiscal seta or any reticulate pattern on venter (each plate with a subdiscal seta, sometimes venter with a reticulate pattern [Newstead 1917]); (iii) anogenital fold with 4 anterior margin setae (with 6 anterior margin setae); (iv) legs with a tibio-tarsal articulation, with or without an articulatory sclerosis, but occasionally tibio-tarsal articulation imperfect (with a tibio-tarsal articulation and an articulatory sclerosis); and (v) ventral tubular ducts present or absent (ventral tubular ducts absent). </p>
            <p> Occasionally, a few ventral tubular ducts are present on the mesothorax of  Coccus cephalotaxus sp. n. Another  Coccus species ,  C. discrepans (Green, 1904) , also has ventral tubular ducts only on the thorax. However,  C. cephalotaxus can be separated from  C. discrepans as follows (data for  C. discrepans from Avasthi &amp; Shafee (1991) and Tang (1991) given in brackets): (i) ventral tubular ducts present in a group of 3–6 near each mesocoxa, or between mesocoxa and median area of mesothorax (ventral tubular ducts sparsely present laterad to each metacoxa); (ii) lateral marginal setae numbering 3 pairs (numbering 2 pairs); (iii) preopercular pores present (absent); and (iv) body extremely elongate (body broadly oval). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE3D79FFECD42FFF53FF5DFD942AEE	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cao, Tong;Watson, Gillian W.;Hodgson, Chris J.;Jing, Qi;Feng, Ji-Nian	Cao, Tong, Watson, Gillian W., Hodgson, Chris J., Jing, Qi, Feng, Ji-Nian (2022): The genera Coccus and Prococcus (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) in China with two new combinations and descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 5087 (1): 112-128, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5087.1.5
03BE3D79FFE9D42DFF53FF5DFA5228F1.text	03BE3D79FFE9D42DFF53FF5DFA5228F1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Coccus Linnaeus 1758	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Key to adult female  Coccus species found in China </p>
            <p>1(0) Entire ventral submargin with crowded tubular ducts......................................................... 2</p>
            <p>- If ventral submargin with crowded tubular ducts, these present along only part of submargin.......................... 3</p>
            <p> 2(1) Antenna 6 segmented. Spiracular clefts each containing 3 spiracular setae. Tibio-tarsal sclerotizations present. Median areas of thoracic segments without ventral tubular ducts.........................................  takanoi Takahashi, 1932</p>
            <p>- Antenna 8 segmented. Spiracular clefts each containing 3‒8 spiracular setae. Tibio-tarsal sclerotizations absent. Ventral tubular ducts present on medial areas of pro-, meso- and metathorax.......................... multisetus Wang &amp; Feng, 2012</p>
            <p> 3(1) Dorsal setae all slender, tapered and obviously curved. Multilocular disc pores mostly each with 7 loculi...............................................................................................  longulus (Douglas, 1887)</p>
            <p>- Dorsal setae more robust, straight or only slightly curved near apex. Multilocular disc pores each with 7‒14 loculi........ 4</p>
            <p> 4(3) Dorsal submargin with tubular ducts around entire body, totaling 24‒31. Dorsal tubular ducts with outer ductules much wider than those of ventral tubular ducts.....................................................  moestus De Lotto, 1959</p>
            <p>- Dorsal submarginal tubular ducts absent or, if present, many fewer and confined to abdominal segments only. Dorsal tubular ducts with outer ductules narrower than those of ventral tubular ducts............................................ 5</p>
            <p>5(4) Dorsal setae blunt, cylindrical or capitate or clavate.......................................................... 6</p>
            <p>- Dorsal setae sharply or dully pointed, either conical or robust and slightly tapered distally............................ 9</p>
            <p>6(5) Ventral tubular ducts each with inner ductule short and about as wide as, or much wider than outer ductule.............. 7</p>
            <p>- Ventral tubular ducts each with inner ductule long and much narrower than outer ductule............................ 8</p>
            <p> 7(6) Ventral tubular ducts each with inner ductule short and inflated, much wider than outer ductule. Ventral tubular ducts absent from abdominal segments............................................................  asiaticus (Green, 1896)</p>
            <p> - Ventral tubular ducts each with long inner ductule almost as wide as outer ductule. Ventral tubular ducts present medially on abdominal segment II................................................................  viridis (Green, 1889)</p>
            <p>8(6) Dorsal setae cylindrical. Ventral tubular ducts present on mesothorax, on medial area and by mesocoxa, absent from abdominal submargin. Anal plates together slightly longer than wide.............. praetermissus Lin &amp; Tanaka in Lin et al., 2017</p>
            <p> - Dorsal setae capitate. Ventral tubular ducts absent from thorax, but a few present on abdominal submargin. Anal plates together obviously longer than wide, with posterolateral margins obviously longer than anterolateral margins...................................................................................................  capparidis (Green, 1904)</p>
            <p>9(5) Preopercular pores absent.............................................................................. 10</p>
            <p>- Preopercular pores present in a group anterior to anal plates.................................................. 11</p>
            <p> 10(9) Anal plates each with a discal seta. Ventral tubular ducts entirely absent. Multilocular disc pores each with mainly 7 loculi. Ano-genital fold with anterior margin setae numbering 3 pairs.......................  nanningensis Cao &amp; Feng ,  sp. n.</p>
            <p> - Anal plates each without a discal seta. Ventral tubular ducts sparsely present laterad to each metacoxa. Multilocular disc pores each with mainly 10 loculi. Ano-genital fold with anterior margin setae numbering 2 pairs.......  discrepans (Green, 1904)</p>
            <p>11(9) Ventral tubular ducts present, either submarginally on abdomen or medially on thorax.............................. 12</p>
            <p> - Ventral tubular ducts usually absent, occasionally present on mesothorax...............  cephalotaxus Cao &amp; Feng ,  sp. n.</p>
            <p> 12(11) Ventral multilocular disc pores present on all abdominal segments. Ventral tubular ducts restricted to submedial areas on abdomen, absent from medial areas of thorax. Submarginal tubercles absent............  pseudomagnoliarum (Kuwana, 1914)</p>
            <p>- Ventral multilocular disc pores restricted to abdominal segment VII, or VI and VII. Ventral tubular ducts present medially on thorax. Submarginal tubercles present or absent............................................................ 13</p>
            <p> 13(12) Dorsal setae all sharply setose. Submarginal tubercles absent. Antennal segments all short, often shorter than segmental width. Ventral tubular ducts numerous near mouthparts and medially on pro- and mesothorax...........  formicarii (Green, 1896)</p>
            <p> - Dorsal setae each with approximately parallel sides and a dully pointed apex. Submarginal tubercles present. Antennal segments all quite long, most clearly longer than segmental width. Ventral tubular ducts very few or absent from near mouthparts but present medially on mesothorax.................................................  hesperidum Linnaeus, 1758</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE3D79FFE9D42DFF53FF5DFA5228F1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cao, Tong;Watson, Gillian W.;Hodgson, Chris J.;Jing, Qi;Feng, Ji-Nian	Cao, Tong, Watson, Gillian W., Hodgson, Chris J., Jing, Qi, Feng, Ji-Nian (2022): The genera Coccus and Prococcus (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Coccidae) in China with two new combinations and descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 5087 (1): 112-128, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5087.1.5
