Trialeurodes vaporariorum
FAMILY
Aleyrodidae
TAXONOMY
Aleurodes vaporariorum Waterhouse, 1856, England.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Glasshouse whitefly; Spanish: Mosca blanca de invernaderos.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Small, about 0.06 in (1.5 mm) long. Body and wings are powdered with white wax, which masks the yellowish to pale brown surface. Sexes are similar, both winged. Larvae scalelike and yellowish.
DISTRIBUTION
Cosmopolitan and intertropical; almost exclusively found in greenhouses in temperate zones.
HABITAT
Leaves (mostly on the underside) and twigs of a great variety of plants, including many cultivated ones.
BEHAVIOR
First-instar larvae walk for a couple of hours and then fix the beak at the underside of a leaf and remain there through four molts. The last instar serves as a puparium, inside which the winged adult develops. Gregarious, mostly at the underside of leaves; adults fly quickly if disturbed.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Once the ambulatory first-instar larva finds a suitable place on a leaf, it buries its beak and starts feeding. Adults also suck sap but move around.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Mating and egg laying take place on the plants. The yellow eggs are glued to the surface in curved rows; they turn black before hatching. Reproduction occurs year-round.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not threatened.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
A serious pest in greenhouses. Large numbers reduce plant vigor. Sooty mold develops on the honeydew from adults and larvae, reducing marketability; some cultures must be abandoned.




