Review of the spore-feeding Idolothripinae from China (Thysanoptera, Phlaeothripidae)
Author
Dang, Li-Hong
Author
Qiao, Ge-Xia
text
ZooKeys
2013
345
1
28
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.345.6167
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.345.6167
1313-2970-345-1
Dinothrips Bagnall
Remarks.
This genus comprises six Asian species, of which four are recorded from southern China,
Dinothrips hainanensis
,
Dinothrips juglandis
,
Dinothrips spinosus
and
Dinothrips sumatrensis
. Species of this genus can be recognised by the pelta divided into three separate parts, and the males with the mesothoracic spiracular area curiously expanded into a prominent process (
Mound and Palmer 1983
). Species differ in the shape of this process in males, but females cannot be identified to species with any certainty. The spiracular process of males varies with body size within
Dinothrips spinosus
, and the shape also varies in slide-mounted specimens due to cover-slip pressure. As a result, it seems likely that
Dinothrips hainanensis
is the same species as
Dinothrips spinosus
. Here, the key to three species of
Dinothrips Dinothrips
from China excludes
Dinothrips hainanensis
.
Diagnosis.
Head much longer than wide, projecting slightly in front of eyes, cheeks with numbers of stout setae; eyes equally developed ventrally and dorsally; postocular setae well developed, interocellar setae usually developed; stylets V-shaped; antennae 8-segmented, segment III with 2 sensoria, IV with 4; pronotal major setae usually pointed or blunt, notopleural sutures complete; basantra present; mesothoracic spiracular area of male usually prolonged into prominent process; mesopraesternum boat-shaped; metathoracic sternopleural sutures absent; wings, if present, with duplicated cilia; fore tarsal tooth present in both sexes, a series tuber
cles
present on inner margin of fore tibiae in large males; pelta divided into one large median lobe, 2 small lateral lobes; abdominal tergites
III-VI
with 2 pairs of sigmoid wing-retaining setae; tube surface smooth, without prominent setae; anal setae usually shorter than tube.
Key to
Dinothrips
species from China
Dinothrips juglandis
|
Dinothrips sumatrensis
|
Dinothrips spinosus
|