Ovatus crataegarius

Overview

A cosmopolitan aphid preferring rosaceous plant species and mints.

Common names

Mint aphid.

Distribution

This aphid is globally distributed, located in all but the coldest terrestrial habitats.

Host associations

It has been recorded from several species within two plant families.

Economic importance

It is particularly important on species of Malus and Quince (Rosaceae) and species of Mentha (Lamiaceae). It has been implicated in the transmission of one plant virus.

Additional resources

See also. Taxonomy at Aphid Species FileAphids on the World's Plants.

References

Blackman, R.L. and V.F. Eastop. 1994. Aphids on the World’s Trees. CAB International with The Natural History Museum, London. viii + 987 pages, 135 figures, 16 plates.

Blackman, R.L. and V.F. Eastop. 2000. Aphids on the World’s Crops, Second Edition. John Wiley & Sons with the Natural History Museum, London. x + 466 pages, 58 figures, 51 plates.

Blackman, R.L. and V.F. Eastop. 2006. Aphids on the World’s Herbaceous Plants and Shrubs. Volume 2 The Aphids. John Wiley & Sons with the Natural History Museum, London. viii + pages 1025–1439.

Chan, C.K., A.R. Forbes, and D.A. Raworth. 1991. Aphid-transmitted viruses and their vectors of the world. Agriculture Canada Technical Bulletin 1991–3E. 1–216 pp.

Holman, J. 2009. Host Plant Catalog of Aphids, Palaearctic Region. Springer Science and Business Media B.V. 1216 pp.

Scientific name

Ovatus crataegarius (Walker, 1850)

Habitus of aptera
Habitus of aptera
Head of aptera
Head of aptera
Rostrum of aptera
Rostrum of aptera
Antenna of aptera
Antenna of aptera
Abdomen of aptera
Abdomen of aptera
Siphunculus of aptera
Siphunculus of aptera
Cauda of aptera
Cauda of aptera
Habitus of alata
Habitus of alata
Head of alata
Head of alata
Rostrum of alata
Rostrum of alata
Antenna of alata
Antenna of alata
Abdomen of alata
Abdomen of alata
Siphunculus of alata
Siphunculus of alata
Cauda of alata
Cauda of alata