A new species of the genus Tameothrips Bhatti (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) with four new records of thrips from India
Author
Tyagi, Kaomud
Author
Kumar, Vikas
Author
Chauhan, Neena
text
Zootaxa
2015
4007
2
283
289
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4007.2.11
9ed2192f-cc92-4921-83e3-8640e8274c3a
1175-5326
243454
6096C10F-597D-4886-92A1-2D43AB42DD02
Scirtothrips kenyensis
Mound
Scirtothrips kenyensis
Mound, 1968
, 535.
The genus
Scirtothrips
is one of the largest genera of insect order
Thysanoptera
with 109 species listed currently (ThripsWiki 2015). These thrips mostly feed and breed on newly emerged, young leaves and have been reported as major pests of a wide variety of economically important crops and also as vectors of tospoviruses (
Mound & Stiller 2011
;
Riley
et al
. 2011
).
S. kenyensis
was originally described as a serious pest of tea in
Kenya
(
Mound 1968
), and is here reported for the first time outside of Africa. It is a large, dark species in comparison to other species of this genus, and can be distinguished by the robust body, presence of one pair of long pronotal setae, and straight cilia on the fore wing.
Diagnosis.
Body yellow with extensive brown shading, tergites and sternites with dark median areas and dark antecostal ridges, pronotum with brown markings, head brown in ocellar region; antennal segment I yellow, segments II–VIII brown; fore wing including clavus brown (
Fig. 3
). Ocellar setae III close together on tangent between anterior margins of hind ocelli; fore wing second vein with 3 setae, posterior cilia straight; metanotum reticulate; tergites VIII–IX with no microtrichia medially; sternites without microtrichia medially.
Material studied
.
INDIA
, Himachal Pradesh, Mandi, tea plantation,
2 females
15.x.2013
, Tyagi & Kumar (Reg. No. 6517/H17 to 6518/H17),
4 females
,
5.vi.2014
, (Reg. No. 6519/H17 to 6522/H17), one female,
4.vi.2014
, (Reg. No. 6523/H17), Tyagi & Kumar.