Scale insects from Dutch New Guinea

New Guinea is next to Greenland the largest island in the world; its area is about 785000 sq. kilometers (with adjacent islands ca. 806000 sq.kms). It lies within the tropics, quite near the equator, and is largely covered by a luxuriant vegetation, so that a rich fauna of scale insects may be expec...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Reyne, A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1961
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/504978
Description
Summary:New Guinea is next to Greenland the largest island in the world; its area is about 785000 sq. kilometers (with adjacent islands ca. 806000 sq.kms). It lies within the tropics, quite near the equator, and is largely covered by a luxuriant vegetation, so that a rich fauna of scale insects may be expected, though extremely little has been published on this subject.\nIn FERNALD\xe2\x80\x99S catalogue with supplements (1903\xe2\x80\x941915), and in the Zoological Record for the years 1915\xe2\x80\x941957, only 4 new species are reported from New Guinea, viz. Myxolecanium kibarae BECCARI (FERNALD No. 1005), Aulacaspis major RUTHERFORD, Ceroplastes murrayi FROGGATT, and Steatococcus samaraius MORRISON (Zool. Ree. 1916, 1919, and 1927).