identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
341E62866843C3C2C2A2EC68DCCDF05A.text	341E62866843C3C2C2A2EC68DCCDF05A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Takecallis Mastumura 1917	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Takecallis Mastumura, 1917</p>
            <p> Takecallis Matsumura, 1917: 354, 373. </p>
            <p>Type-species.</p>
            <p> Takecallis bambusae Matsumura, 1917 (=  T. arundicolens ) by original designation. </p>
            <p>Generic diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Alatae: Morphological features of  Takecallis are similar to  Subtakecallis Raychaudhuri and Pal in having a nose-like processus on the clypeus, and spinal abdominal setae surrounded by cribriform wax glands. However, this genus can be distinguished from the above genus by the following characters: PT/BASE ≥ 1.00 and spinal abdominal setae often at low elevations. Apterae are unknown. </p>
            <p> Host plant. </p>
            <p> Takecallis species occur on various bamboos such as  Arundinaria spp.,  Bambusa spp.,  Dendrocalamus spp.,  Pseudosasa spp.,  Phyllostachys spp.,  Pleioblastus spp., and  Sasa spp. (  Poaceae ). </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>This genus is native to the Oriental region, but one or more species occur as introduced populations in Australian, Ethiopian, Palearctic, Nearctic, and Neotropical regions.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/341E62866843C3C2C2A2EC68DCCDF05A	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Lee, Yerim;Lee, Seunghwan	Lee, Yerim, Lee, Seunghwan (2018): A review of the genus Takecallis Mastumura in Korea with the description of a new species (Hemiptera, Aphididae). ZooKeys 748: 131-149, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.748.23140, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.748.23140
DA8B6C04E00B1BB4D9D110B90A6655AE.text	DA8B6C04E00B1BB4D9D110B90A6655AE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Takecallis alba Y. Lee	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Takecallis alba Y. Lee sp. n. Figs 1A, 2, Table 1 </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> Holotype: 1 alate viviparous female, Mt. Hwangbyeong, Pyeongchang-gun, GW, South Korea, 37°42'27"N, 128°41'14"E, on  Sasa sp., Y. Lee leg., 29.viii.2013, no. 130829YR-11; Paratypes: 10 alate viviparous females, same data as the holotype; 7 alate viviparous females, Mungyeong-eup, Mungyeong-si, GN, South Korea, 36°47'11"N, 128°09'29"E, on  Pseudosasa sp., S. Lee leg., 18.v.2005, no. 050518SH-38; 6 alate viviparous females, Mt. Hwangbyeong, Pyeongchang-gun, GW, South Korea, 37°42'27"N, 128°41'14"E, on  Sasa sp., Y. Lee leg., 15.viii.2013, no. 130815YR-12; 5 alate viviparous females, Mt. Deokyousan, Muju-gun, JB, South Korea, 35°54'23"N, 127°48'51"E, on  Pseudosasa sp., H. Lee leg., 30.vi.2014, no. 140630YR-2; 2 alate viviparous females, Inje-gun, Hangye-ri, Hangyeryng, GW, South Korea, 38°6'31"N, 128°24'49"E, on  Sasa sp., Y. Lee leg., 15.vi.2015, no. 150615YR-3. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The species name alba is derived from Latin, referring to its pale body color.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> T. alba sp. n. is morphologically close to  T. assumenta Qiao and Zhang and  T. affinis Ghosh. However, this species can be distinguished from the latter two species by the following characters: URS with four accessory setae (accessory setae absent in  T. assumenta , two accessory setae in  T. affinis ), URS 0.45-0.50  × HT 2 (0.43 in  T. assumenta , 0.32-0.41 in  T. affinis ), ANT III with 4-7 transversely elliptical secondary rhinaria densely concentrated on very short dark section of proximal 3rd of ANT III (6-10 elliptical secondary rhinaria, on basal 1/3 of the segment in  T. assumenta , 10-16 subcircular secondary rhinaria on basal 2/5 of the segment in  T. affinis ). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Alate viviparous female: Color in life. Head pale to yellow, compound eye red. ANT pale, marginal border of ANT I-II dusky, the top end of 1/3 of the segment, and distal joint of ANT III dark, distal joint of ANT IV - BASE dusky. Thorax and ABD TERG pale yellow to bright yellow. Legs pale, distal 2/5 of FEM with dark spot, tarsi dark. Wing veins dark, margins of wing veins with dark spots. SIPH pale. Cauda slightly dark. Entire body covered with white wax.</p>
            <p> Morphology. Body oval, BL 2.08-2.51 mm long. Head with three pairs of anterior and two pairs of posterior short and pointed discal setae about 0.02-0.03 mm long, median protrusion on frons developed, epicranial suture and antennal tubercle developed, head dorsum without tubercles. ANT 6-segmented, 1.48-1.70  × BL, ANT III longest with 4-7 transversely elliptical secondary rhinaria in a row on the top end of 1/3 of the segment, Ls ANT III 0.25-0.50  × BD III, ANT IV-VI imbricated, ANT IV without secondary rhinaria, ANT IV longer than ANT V, PT 0.89-1.11  × BASE. Clypeus with nose-like processus bearing two hairs. Rostrum very short, barely reaching to fore coxae, URS short blunted, 0.05 mm long with four accessory setae, URS 0.13-0.15  × BASE, 0.45-0.50  × HT 2. Thorax smooth without tubercles. Fore coxae enlarged. Longest setae on TIB 0.06-1.00  × middle width of TIB, first tarsal segments with 6-7 setae, HT 2 0.10-0.11 mm long. Wing vein Pts of forewing slightly dark, margins of wing veins Cu1b, Cu1a, and M with dark spots. Dorsal ABD TERG  I–VII with a pair of spinal setae on small elevations, ABD TERG VIII with a pair of spinal setae on a single elevation, ABD TERG margin  I–IV with a single seta on cone-shaped marginal tubercle, 4th marginal tubercle 0.04-0.05mm. SIPH cylindrical 0.08-0.11 mm long, bearing 0.03-0.05 mm of  single seta. Cauda knobbed 0.12-0.14 mm long with 9-12 setae. Anal plate bilobed, each lobe with 7-10 setae. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>This species has so far been collected from Gyeongsangnam-do, Gangwon-do, and Jeollanam-do of South Korea.</p>
            <p> Host plants. </p>
            <p> This species feeds on the underside of leaves of  Pseudosasa sp., and  Sasa spp. (  Poaceae ). The host plants were identified by the first author using Lee (2003). </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> This species was first referred to as  Takecallis sp. in Lee et al. 2017. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DA8B6C04E00B1BB4D9D110B90A6655AE	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Lee, Yerim;Lee, Seunghwan	Lee, Yerim, Lee, Seunghwan (2018): A review of the genus Takecallis Mastumura in Korea with the description of a new species (Hemiptera, Aphididae). ZooKeys 748: 131-149, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.748.23140, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.748.23140
CDE0F2C855A9EC94A7B8F4DB7867C7C7.text	CDE0F2C855A9EC94A7B8F4DB7867C7C7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Takecallis arundicolens (Clarke 1903) Clarke 1903	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Takecallis arundicolens (Clarke, 1903) Figs 1B, 3, Table 1 </p>
            <p> Takecallis
bambusae
 Matsumura, 1917. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> 2 alate viviparous females, Naksan-temple, Ganghyeon-myeon, Yangyang-gun, GW, South Korea, 38°7'25"N, 128°37'38"E, on  Sasa sp., S. Lee leg., 25.vi.2003, no. 030625SH-62; 1 alate viviparous female, Namheae-gun, GN, South Korea, 34°50'15"N 127°53'32"E, on  Sasa sp., S. Lee leg., 7.iv.2006, no. 060407SH-16; 1 alate viviparous female, Seobjikoji Beach, Seoguipo-si, JJ, South Korea, 33°25'24"N, 126°55'45"E, on  Sasa sp., S. Lee leg., 27.iv.2006, no. 060427SH-55; 3 alate viviparous females, Ehwa womans univ., Deahyeon-dong, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul, South Korea, 37°33'42"N, 126°56'48"E, on  Arundinaria sp., Y. Lee leg., 18.x.2011, no. 111018YR-1; 2 alate viviparous females, Taean-gun, CN, South Korea, 36°47'47"N, 126°09'04"E, on  Sasa sp., Y. Lee and H. Lee leg., 10.v.2014, no. 140510YR-17; 1 alate viviparous female, Is. Odongdo, Yeosu-si, JN, South Korea, 34°44'51"N, 127°45'52"E, on  Sasa sp., Y. Lee and H. Lee leg., 16.vii.2014, no. 140716YR-1. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Alate viviparous female: Color in life. Head pale to bright yellow, compound eye pale. ANT I concolorous with head, ANT II slightly dusky, basal 1/3 and distal 1/3 of ANT III dark, basal half of ANT IV-V, and ANT VIb dusky. Thorax concolorous with head or slightly darker. ABD TERG pale yellow to bright yellow. Legs pale, tarsi dark. Wing veins dark. SIPH pale. Cauda dark. Entire body slightly covered with white wax.</p>
            <p> Morphology. Body oval, BL 1.57-1.89 mm long. Head with 3 pairs of anterior and 2 pairs of posterior short and pointed discal setae about 0.02-0.04mm, median protrusion on frons developed, epicranial suture and antennal tubercle developed, head dorsum without tubercles. ANT 6-segmented, 1.30-1.60  × BL, ANT III longest with 4-7 transversely elliptical secondary rhinaria in a row on 1/3 of the segment, Ls ANT III 0.33  × BD III, ANT  IV–VI imbricated, ANT IV without secondary rhinaria, BASE with a single seta, PT 1.10-1.26  × BASE. Clypeus with nose-like processus, rostrum very short, reaching to fore coxae, URS short blunted, 0.05-0.06 mm long with 4-5 accessory setae, URS 0.16-0.20  × BASE, 0.56-0.67  × HT 2. Thorax smooth and without tubercles. Fore coxae enlarged, longest setae on TIB almost same length as middle width of TIB, first tarsal segments with 5-7 setae, HT 2 0.09-0.10 mm long. Wing vein Pts of forewing slightly dark. Dorsal ABD TERG  I–VII with a pair of spinal setae on small elevations, ABD TERG VIII with a pair of spinal setae, ABD TERG margin I-IV with a single seta on cone-shaped marginal tu  bercle , 4th marginal tubercle 0.04-0.05mm. SIPH cylindrical 0.04-0.05 mm long with 0.02-0.03 mm of single seta. Cauda knobbed 0.14-0.15 mm long with 9-13 setae. Anal plate bilobed, each lobe with 7-8 setae. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>This species is originally distributed in East Asian countries; Korea (Paik 1965), China (Qiao and Zhang 2004), Japan (Higuchi 1968), and eastern Russia (Blackman and Eastop 2017). It has been introduced into Europe (Pons and Lumbierres 2004, Stroyan 1964), and USA (California) (Clarke 1903). However, the recent DNA barcoding result revealed that European populations are genetically different from Asian populations (Lee et al. 2017).</p>
            <p>Host plants.</p>
            <p> Arundinaria spp.,  Bambusa spp.,  Phyllostachys spp., and  Sasa spp. (  Poaceae ). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CDE0F2C855A9EC94A7B8F4DB7867C7C7	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Lee, Yerim;Lee, Seunghwan	Lee, Yerim, Lee, Seunghwan (2018): A review of the genus Takecallis Mastumura in Korea with the description of a new species (Hemiptera, Aphididae). ZooKeys 748: 131-149, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.748.23140, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.748.23140
C44047036508CAE47411DCFEC8A734A0.text	C44047036508CAE47411DCFEC8A734A0.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Takecallis arundinariae (Essig 1917) Essig 1917	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Takecallis
arundinariae (Essig, 1917)
 Figs 1C, 4, Table 1 </p>
            <p> Takecallis arundinariae Blackman, 1980. </p>
            <p> Myzocallis bambucifoliae Takahashi, 1921. </p>
            <p> Myzocallis bambusifoliae Takahashi, 1921. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> 1 alate viviparous female, Seoul, South Korea, 37°34'31"N, 126°59'51"E, on  Sinoarundinaria reticulata , W.H. Paik leg., 15.v.1960, no. 1258; 1 alate viviparous female, Seoul, South Korea, 37°34'31"N, 126°59'51"E, on  Sasa kurilensis , W.H. Paik leg., 3.xi.1971, no. 6924; 5 alate viviparous females, Hwasun, JN, South Korea, 35°3'52"N, 126°59'11"E, on unknown host, S. Lee leg., 31.iii.1999, no. 990331SH-1; 6 alate viviparous females, Chupungryeong, Gimcheon, GB, South Korea, 36°13'9"N, 127°59'51"E, on  Sasa sp., S. Lee leg., 12.v.1999, no. 990512SH-30; 5 alate viviparous females, Sanpo-myeon, Naju-si, JN, South Korea, 35°2'22"N, 126°48'21"E, on  Phyllostachys bambusoidea , G.M. Kwon leg., 12.i.2000, no. 000112GM-04; 5 alate viviparous females, Namyang-myeon, Goheung-gun, JN, South Korea, 34°43'42"N, 127°20'10"E, on  Phyllostachys bambusoidea , S. Lee leg., 14.iii.2000, no. 000314SH-2; 3 alate viviparous females, Sacheon-gun, GN, South Korea, 37°48'39"N, 128°51'17"E, on  Phyllostachys bambusoidea , S. Lee leg., 16.iii.2000, no. 000316SH-6; 4 alate viviparous females, Namhae-gun, GN, South Korea, 34°49'58"N, 127°53'53"E, on  Gramineae sp., S. Lee leg., 8.iv.2006, no. 060408SH16; 2 alate viviparous females, Taean-gun, CN, South Korea, 36°44'44"N 126°17'52"E, on  Phyllostachys sp., Y. Lee and H. Lee leg., 10.v.2014, no. 140510YR-17. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Alate viviparous female: Color in life. Head pale to bright yellow with black stripe on head dorsum, compound eye pale red. From ANT I to basal half of ANT III dark, from distal joint of ANT III to BASE dusky. Thorax pale yellow with dark stripe pattern. ABD TERG pale yellow with pair of dark dorsal tubercle. Legs pale, tarsi dark. Wing veins dark. SIPH and cauda pale. Entire body slightly covered with white wax.</p>
            <p> Morphology. Body oval, BL 1.90-2.65 mm long. Head with three pairs of anterior and two pairs of posterior short and pointed discal setae about 0.010.02mm, median protrusion on frons developed, epicranial suture and antennal tubercle developed, head dorsum without tubercles. ANT 6-segmented, 1.22-1.39  × BL, ANT III longest with 5-10 transversely elliptical secondary rhinaria in a row on 1/4 of the segment, Ls ANT III 0.20-0.33 times as long as BD III, ANT IV-VI imbricated, ANT IV without secondary rhinaria, PT 0.94-1.27 times as long as BASE. Clypeus with nose-like processus, rostrum very short, passing over fore coxae, URS short blunted, 0.050.06 mm with four accessory setae, URS 0.13-0.23  × BASE, 0.42-0.60  × HT 2. Thorax smooth and without tubercles. Fore coxae enlarged, longest setae on TIB 0.75-1.25  × middle width of TIB, first tarsal segments with 5-7 setae, HT 2 0.10-0.12 mm long. Wing veins Co and Pts of forewing slightly dark. Dorsal ABD TERG  I–VII with a pair of spinal setae on small elevations, ABD TERG VIII with a pair of spinal setae. SIPH cylindrical, 0.05-0.07 mm long bearing about 0.03-0.06 mm of single seta. Cauda knobbed 0.11-0.16 mm long with 10-15 setae. Anal plate bilobed, each lobe with 8-12 setae. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> This species is originally distributed in south-east Asian countries; Korea (Paik 1965), China (Qiao and Zhang 2004), India (Gosh et al. 1971), Japan (Higuchu 1968), Taiwan (Higuchu 1968), and eastern Russia (Blackman and Eastop 2017). It has invaded Europe (Barbagallo and Ortu 2009, Basky and  Neményi 2014, Giacalone and Lampel 1996, Higuchi 1968, Limonta 1990, Piron 2009, Tistispis et al. 2007), Australia (Valenzuela et al. 2010), New Zealand (Blackman and Eastop 2017), North America (Coﬀelt and Schultz 1990), and South America (Foureaux and Kato 1999, Lazzari et al. 1999, Simbaqueba et al. 2016). </p>
            <p>Host plants.</p>
            <p> Arundinaria spp.,  Bambusa spp.,  Dendrocalamus spp.,  Phyllostachys spp.,  Sasa spp., and  Sinoarundinaria reticulata (  Poaceae ). </p>
            <p> Remarks . </p>
            <p> Among the examined specimens, it is described that four alate viviparous females were collected on  Gramineae sp. However, this host plant is probably not a true host plant due to  Takecallis species being recorded only on bamboo species, and is probably a misidentification. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C44047036508CAE47411DCFEC8A734A0	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Lee, Yerim;Lee, Seunghwan	Lee, Yerim, Lee, Seunghwan (2018): A review of the genus Takecallis Mastumura in Korea with the description of a new species (Hemiptera, Aphididae). ZooKeys 748: 131-149, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.748.23140, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.748.23140
19F5914842E715AC4FC65B163DD8581F.text	19F5914842E715AC4FC65B163DD8581F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Takecallis taiwana (Takahashi 1926) Takahashi 1926	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Takecallis taiwana (Takahashi, 1926) Fig. 5, Table 1 </p>
            <p> Therioaphis
tectae
 Tissot, 1932. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> 6 alate viviparous females, Seoguipo-si, JJ, South Korea, 33°15'3"N, 126°32'38"E, on  Sasa sp., W.H. Paik leg., 25.iv.1971, no. 6196; 8 alate viviparous females, Seoguipo-si, JJ, South Korea, 33°15'3"N, 126°32'38"E, on  Sasa sp., W.H. Paik leg., 15.x.1971, no. 6799. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Alate viviparous female: Color in life. Not available in this study.</p>
            <p> Morphology. Body oval, BL 2.21-2.48 mm long. Head with three pairs of anterior and two pairs of posterior pointed discal setae about 0.04-0.05mm, median protrusion on frons developed, epicranial suture and antennal tubercle developed, head dorsum with a central black stripe, spinal tubercle not developed. ANT 6-segmented 0.73-0.79  × BL, ANT III longest with 5-7 transversely elliptical secondary rhinaria in a row on basal 1/3 of the segment, longest setae on ANT III 0.33-0.67  × BD III, from distal half of ANT III to ANT VI imbricated, ANT IV without secondary rhinaria, PT 0.901.06  × BASE. Clypeus with nose-like processus, rostrum very short, reaching to fore coxae, URS short blunted 0.07 mm long with 4-5 accessory setae, URS  × 0.35-0.44 BASE, 0.54-0.64  × HT 2. Thorax smooth, without tubercles. Fore coxae weakly enlarged, longest setae on TIB 0.08-1.00  × middle width of TIB, first tarsal segments with 5-7 setae, HT 2 0.11-0.13 mm long. Wing veins Co and Pts of forewing slightly dark. Dorsal ABD TERG  I–VII with a pair of spinal setae on small elevations, ABD TERG VIII with 2 setae. SIPH cylindrical, 0.04-0.06 mm long. Cauda knobbed 0.15-0.20 mm long with 12-13 setae. Anal plate bilobed, each lobe with ten setae. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>This species is widely distributed in Southeast Asia; Korea (Paik 1965), China (Qiao and Zhang 2004), Japan (Higuchi 1968), and Taiwan (Higuchi 1968). It has been introduced into Europe (Higuchi 1968, Maslyakov and Izhevsky 2011, Ripka 2008, Simala et al. 2008), South Africa (Quednau 1962), New Zealand (Blackman and Eastop 2017), North America (Halbert et al. 2000), and South America (Foureaux and Kato 1999, Lazzari et al. 1999).</p>
            <p>Host plants.</p>
            <p> Arundinaria spp.,  Bambusa spp.,  Phyllostachys spp., and  Sasa spp. (  Poaceae ). </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> This species was misidentified as  T. sasae by Paik (1972) in Korea. Later it was revised to  T. taiwana by Quednau and Lee (2001). </p>
            <p> Key to species of the genus  Takecallis in Korea (Fig. 6) </p>
            <p> Molecular analyses and discussion </p>
            <p> The NJ tree of partial COI sequences suggested that 63 sequences are distinctly divided into six groups (Fig. 7). This result clearly represented each morpho-specific group except the  T. arundicolens complex. The  T. arundicolens complex was separated into two genetically distinct groups (Fig. 7). Genetic distances between the two  T. arundicolens groups ranged from 7.16 % to 9.36 %. These intraspecific divergence values are much higher than the general species delimitation value of 2.5 % in the subfamily  Calaphidinae (Lee et al. 2017). In the previous study, Lee et al. (2017) suggested that this species complex seems to include at least 2 distinct species. However, it is very difficult to determine which one is the original species because morphological differences between genetically distinct groups were only observed in alatoid nymphs (Lee et al. 2017). Therefore, to solve this issue explicitly, additional studies are needed. </p>
            <p> Except for the  T. arundicolens complex, the rest of the four species showed 0 % of intraspecific genetic divergence (Table 2). Interspecific distances among the five species ranged from 5.71 % to 14.44 % (Table 2).  T. sasae and  T. taiwana showed the lowest interspecific distance level (Table 2). Overall mean genetic distance was 8.91 % for the 63 partial COI sequences of the five  Takecallis species. </p>
            <p> Molecular evidence strongly indicates the validity of  T. alba sp. n. All of the individuals of  T. alba sp. n. were grouped together and this group was clearly separated from other species groups with a high interspecific distance level that ranged from 9.36 % to 13.46 % (Table 2). Morphological characteristics of this species correspond  to molecular evidence. Although we could not test all  Takecallis species from all over the world, this species also has morphological characteristics that distinguish it from all known species. Morphologically,  T. alba sp. n. is most similar to  T. affinis and  T. assumenta . However, its number of accessory setae on URS and the arrangement of secondary rhinaria on ANT III are clearly distinct from the above two species. </p>
            <p> In the present study, four  Takecallis species were recognized from Korea. Our study demonstrated that the four species are clearly separated based on morphological and molecular evidence. However, the taxonomic status of genetically distinct groups within the  T. arundicolens complex still needs to be resolved. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/19F5914842E715AC4FC65B163DD8581F	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Lee, Yerim;Lee, Seunghwan	Lee, Yerim, Lee, Seunghwan (2018): A review of the genus Takecallis Mastumura in Korea with the description of a new species (Hemiptera, Aphididae). ZooKeys 748: 131-149, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.748.23140, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.748.23140
