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common name: false-mastic psylla
scientific name: Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley (Insecta: Hemiptera: Psyllidae)

Introduction - Distribution - Description - Hosts Plant - Selected References

Introduction (Back to Top)

Leaves of the false-mastic tree (Sideroxylon foetidissimum Jacq.) commonly are attacked by a jumping plant louse, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley. Damage is often severe, but since the host itself is not highly commercialized, little attention has been given to control methods.

New adult false-mastic psylla, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley, emerging from a pupal case.

Figure 1. New adult false-mastic psylla, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley, emerging from a pupal case. Photograph by Lyle J. Buss, University of Florida.

Distribution (Back to Top)

This psyllid was originally described from Lake Worth, Florida, in 1885 by C.V. Riley. Since then it has been reported from other localities in southern Florida, principally along the Atlantic seaboard from Cape Canaveral south to Key West as well as in Zacatula, Guerrero, and Esmerelda, Chiapas, Mexico. Most of the Florida localities are taken from records in the files of the Division of Plant Industry.

Description (Back to Top)

Psyllid nymphs are found on the underside of a leaf, embedded in small, scattered, cup-shaped excavations, which on the upper side of the leaf appear as rough, elevated pustules. A white waxlike (not flocculent) excretion covers the dorsal surface of the nymphs and makes them very conspicuous.

Nymphs of the false-mastic psylla, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley.

Figure 2. Nymphs of the false-mastic psylla, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley. Photograph by Lyle J. Buss, University of Florida.

Nymph (left) and a pit (right), from which it was removed, of a false-mastic psylla, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley.

Figure 3. Nymph (left) and a pit (right), from which it was removed, of a false-mastic psylla, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley. Photograph by Lyle J. Buss, University of Florida.

Adult psyllids of this species are 4 mm long to tip of folded wings. Their general color is green to yellow. The front of head, between antennae, including genal (=cheek) processes, the anterior 2/3 of prescutum and two broad stripes on scutum (=back), are dark brown. The antennae are dark apically. The wings are hyaline (glassy or transparent).

Adult false-mastic psylla, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley.

Figure 4. Adult false-mastic psylla, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley. Photograph by Lyle J. Buss, University of Florida.

Microscopic characters of the head and wings are used to separate this psyllid from other species. No other closely related species is known from Florida. In fact, Arnett (2000) lists this species as the only member of its genus in America north of Mexico.

Host Plant (Back to Top)

The host plant species, Sideroxylon foetidissimum, ranges from southern Florida, including the Florida Keys, north to the eastern coast to Cape Canaveral (Little 1953). It also is found in the West Indies (including Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands), and a variety is found in Yucatan peninsula of Mexico and Belize. The USDA Plant database lists Florida as the only state that has this species (USDA 2006).

Infestation of the false-mastic psylla, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley.

Figure 5. Infestation of the false-mastic psylla, Ceropsylla sideroxyli Riley. Photograph by Lyle J. Buss, University of Florida.


Figure 6. Range of Sideroxylon foetidissimum in Florida.

Little (1953) lists mastic and wild olive as other common names and gives Sideroxylon mastichodendron and Mastichodendron foetidissimum as synonyms. The specific epithet refers to the very ill-smelling, cheese-like odor of the numerous flowers.

This psyllid also attacks other Sideroxylon (Sapotaceae) species (Percy 2005).

Selected References (Back to Top)