2010
DOI: 10.2478/v10043-010-0025-4
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New Data on the Scale Insects (Hemiptera, Coccoidea) of Southern Lithuania, including Ten Species New for the Country

Abstract: The results of an investigation of scale insects (Hemiptera, Coccoidea) in Alytus, Kaunas and Marijampolė counties of southern Lithuania by the first two authors during a week in August 2009 are presented. Two further samples from Klaipėda and four samples from Vilnius counties are also included. Twenty-eight species of scale insect are recorded, of which ten are new for Lithuania: Diaspidiotus bavaricus (Lindinger), D. ostreaeformis (Curtis), Eriococcus baldonensis (Rasiņa), E. inermis Green, Eriopeltis stamm… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…T. lauri has a wide distribution in the Mediterranean region, where it has been reported in Croatia [ 115 ] and in the former Yugoslavia. It may also have developed in Montenegro, but no published evidence has been found [ 116 ].…”
Section: Superfamily Aleyrodoideamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…T. lauri has a wide distribution in the Mediterranean region, where it has been reported in Croatia [ 115 ] and in the former Yugoslavia. It may also have developed in Montenegro, but no published evidence has been found [ 116 ].…”
Section: Superfamily Aleyrodoideamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The main host plant is Laurus nobilis L. On it, the pest infects both surfaces of the leaf blade. Development can also occur on Arbutus andrachne L., Arbutus unedo L. [ 117 ], and Myrtus communis L. [ 116 , 118 ]. Almost all plants parasitized by T. lauri (i.e., A. andrachne , A. unedo , L. nobilis ) are evergreens that inhabit the landscapes of the southern territories of Europe and the Mediterranean forests with an altitudinal zone of 500 m above sea level.…”
Section: Superfamily Aleyrodoideamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Moreover, the honey dew attracted the ants that interfered with biological control. Aleurothrixus floccosus was first described from Cuba on citrus and was believed to be native to tropical and subtropical America, but now it has been found throughout the warmer parts of the world, wherever citrus is grown (Malumphy et al, 2015). It is a polyphagous species and found feeding on more than 50 plant families (Paulson and Beardsley, 1986) and exhibited a strong preference to citrus.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%