Identification of mealybug species in the
Planococcus genus has been difficult due to an unusually high amount of intraspecies morphological variation. In the 1980s, entomologist
Jennifer Cox at the
British Museum discovered that the offspring of a single female raised on the same host will develop differently based on environmental conditions. She showed that higher temperatures induced smaller specimens overall with fewer pores, shorter appendages, and shorter
setae. From Cox's experiments, the greatest number of tubular ducts in adult females was present at intermediate temperatures, whereas the smallest number were present when temperatures were higher or lower. Cox's work showed that the proposed species
Planococcus citricus was in fact a warm temperature variant of
Planococcus citri. This created issues in the discrimination of species as these characteristics were among those used by Ezzat & McConnell in their treatment of
Planococcus species in 1956. In 1989 Cox revised the genus and listed 35 species. She also created a point-based system to distinguish between
Planococcus minor and
Planococcus citri based on a matrix of six characters, known as the 'Cox score'. However other morphologically similar species, such as
Planococcus ficus and
Planococcus halli, a single diagnostic characteristic was not identified. With the improvements in
genotyping, efforts to develop different systems to distinguish between cryptic species of
Planococcus are ongoing. ==References==