
Appearance
The ''Aspidimorpha sanctaecrucis'', also known as the “golden tortoise beetle”, is an Old word species of beetle belonging to the family Chyrsomelidae. Akin to its name, it has an elegant shell with a golden shine in the discs of its elytra and its prothorax. This golden shine makes a characteristic pattern that can be viewed in its well-defined posterolateral and humeral spots on the explanate elytral margin.After full development, A. ''sanctaecrucis'' will have a body length ranging from 15.60 to 16.30 mm and a body width ranging from 14.30 to 14.60 nm. Its elytra ranges in color from a uniform yellow to red brown to brown with lateral anterior and posterior corners of the explanate margin visible dorsally. Each elytron contains a depression raised along the center behind its scutellum with prominently raised margins ending with a doral conical hump. It has elytral punctures spanning approximately 9 rows and explanate margins that are very broad. The general color of A. ''sanctaecrucis'' ranges from yellow to brown, its head and body color ranges from yellow to red brown, and its legs and antennas are uniformly yellow. Its elytra can be uniformly yellow to red brown to brown. Its eyes are elliptical with distinct gena and its clypeal plate depressed medially. It has fine clypeal grooves throughout and marginated labrum.The A. ''sanctaecrucis'' is often confused with the ''A. miliaris'' species. The A. ''sanctaecrucis'' resembles the ''A. miliaris'' in size and in the anterior and posterior angles of the elytral explanate margin. However, the prominent ridge and longitudinal depression between the humerus and scutellum at the base of the elytra makes A. ''sanctaecrucis'' unique compared to other species. It can be readily separated by the presence of its prominent dorsal hump, which is absent in ''A. miliaris.'' It has an explanate margin broader than the width of the elytral disc and a body length exceeding 15 mm making it the largest species of ''Aspidimorpha'' in Kerala, India.

Behavior
''A. sanctaecrucis'' lays eggs in a paper substance underneath fully opened leaves in aggregates that remain there after hatching into larvae. Clusters can range from 3-18 eggs, but on average, consist of about 11 eggs. In one study using ''Ipomoea carnea'' as a host plant, ''A. sanctaecrucis'' was observed to have a life cycle that ranged from 30 to 37 days under laboratory conditions. This included an egg incubation period of 7–9 days and five successive larval stages followed by a pupal stage. In a separate study that used ''Ipomoea Batatas'' as the host, ''A. miliaris'', a coexisting species, was observed to have a life cycle of about one month. In this study, it was observed that the species and nutritional contents of the host plant significantly affected factors like its life cycle, reproductive rate, mortality rate, life span, and size. Currently, there are no studies on whether these factors affect ''A. sanctaecrucis'' which could be a future area of research.Reproduction
Because of its agricultural relevance, ''A. sanctaecrucis'' has become an economically important beetle with dedicated research interest. Understanding its reproductive potential can give insights into appropriate pest control strategies to protect crops. As a result, its reproductive structures and gametogenic stages have been thoroughly investigated.The male A. ''sanctaecrucis'' features a pair of testis that are made up of six seminiferous tubules in its abdominal region. The tubules are lined with simple high columnar epithelium and range in length from 800 to 850 uM. The seminiferous tubules can be divided into three zones: growth, maturation, and transformation. The zone of growth consists of spermatocytes under mitosis, separate from the spermatogonia. The zone of maturation is found in the spermatids and cycles every two meiotic divisions. The transformation zone is filled with spermatozoa. The seminiferous tubule of the A. ''sanctaecrucis'' is required for sperm production which is made up of 5 stages in tortoise beetles. These stages are spermatogonia, primary spermatocytes, secondary spermatocytes, spermatids and spermatozoa. The spermatogonia of the male A. ''sanctaecrucis'' can either be oval or spherical shape with a cell diameter of approximately 10-12 uM.
Female A. ''sanctaecrucis'' contain a pair of ovaries that consist of several ovarioles each surrounded by a peritoneal membrane. The ovarian duct is covered by a simple columnar epithelium. This epithelium functions to produce secretions that contain carbohydrates and proteins that support the production of the egg membrane. Within the ovary, there are oocytes embedded at various stages. Additionally, there are nurse cells in the terminal filament that function to support the nutrition for the oocyte. The ovary features two distinct zones, the germarium and vitellarium, that are divided according to histological features. The oogonia reside mainly in the germarium where they undergo mitotic processing. Differentiated oocytes can be found in the vitellarium arranged from previtellogenic to vitellogenic stages in a linear arrangement. The previtellogenic oocyte is an oval shape about 300 uM in diameter. It contains a central nucleus about 70 uM in diameter, but by the end of the vitellogenic stage, it decreases to 10 um. However, the size of the vitellogenic oocyte increases to about 450-500 uM compared to previous stages.

Predators
Ants attack egg masses, larvae, and pupae. This can lead to fluctuations in adult populations based on predation.References:
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