[3] The specific name beckii is in honour of historian Richard Beck.
[1] Lepidosaphes beckii was originally described under the name Coccus beckii by English entomologist Edward Newman from a fruit imported to Great Britain.
[1] Newman's original description reads as follows:[1] It appeared as a narrow scale about a tenth of an inch in length, slightly bent at one extremity, and always adhering so closely to the rind of the apple that it is scarcely possible to remove it entire.
The females are larger than the males, and never by any chance leave the spot where they first fasten themselves: the male is winged, ...The adult female citrus mussel scale is up to three millimetres long.
Predators of Lepidosaphes beckii include chalcid wasps from families Aphelinidae, Encyrtidae and Signiphoridae:[5] This article incorporates public domain text from the reference[1]