Leaf-litter thrips of the genus Adraneothrips from Asia and Australia (Thysanoptera, Phlaeothripinae)
Author
Dang, Li-Hong
Author
Mound, Laurence A.
Author
Qiao, Ge-Xia
text
Zootaxa
2013
3716
1
1
21
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3716.1.1
d82e7f44-8b08-4cd9-aa8c-e0c02ac55848
1175-5326
284906
473EE3FD-912D-4D2C-9968-867B56F6FF25
Adraneothrips
Hood
Adraneothrips
Hood, 1925: 54
.
Type
species:
Haplothrips tibialis
Hood
, by original designation.
Stigmothrips
Ananthakrishnan, 1964: 231
.
Type
species:
Stigmothrips limpidus
Ananthakrishnan, 1964
, by original designation.
syn.n.
Baphikothrips
Mound, 1970: 90.
Type
species:
Baphikothrips
antennatus
Mound, by original designation. Synonymised with
Stigmothrips
by Okajima, 1976.
The genus
Adraneothrips
was erected by Hood (1925) for four species from the West Indies, and most of the described species are Neotropical. Mound & Marullo (1996) listed 59 New World species in this genus and provided a key to 32 of these. Okajima (1976) indicated that
Stigmothrips
is similar to
Adraneothrips
, sharing such character states as slender antennal segments, long maxillary stylets, and absence of basantra. Moreover, he suggested that
Stigmothrips
might be considered a subgenus of
Adraneothrips
,
although in 2006 he suggested that it could be treated as a synonym of
Adraneothrips
. Mound & Marullo (1996) indicated that the New World species of
Adraneothrips
seemed to represent three divergent groups, the
alternatus
-group,
bellus
-group and
uniformis
- group. Species of the
bellus
-group are distinguished because the eyes are prolonged ventrally on the head. Species of the
uniformis
-group are distinguished because the maxillary stylets are long and close together medially in the head.
Stigmothrips
species are particularly similar to species of the
alternatus
-group, the only difference being that species of
Stigmothrips
have the notopleural sutures incomplete or almost incomplete, whereas these are complete in species of the
alternatus
-group.
FIGURES 1–9.
Adraneothrips
adult colour patterns.
(1)
braccatus
;
(2)
chinensis
;
(3)
coloratus
;
(4)
darwini
;
(5)
disjunctus
;
(6)
hani
;
(7)
limpidus
;
(8)
makilingensis
;
(9)
nilgiriensis
.
FIGURES 10–15.
Adraneothrips
adult colour patterns.
(10)
pteris
;
(11)
russatus
(Australia)
;
(12)
russatus
(China)
;
(13)
stannardi
;
(14)
waui
;
(15)
yunnanensis
.
The original description of
Stigmothrips
does not mention the prothoracic notopleural sutures and the only illustration is unclear. However, as listed below, specimens of both sexes identified by Ananthakrishnan as
limpidus
have these sutures clearly incomplete (
Fig. 37
). In specimens from
Australia
that are here identified as
russatus
and
coloratus
, the notopleural sutures are variable, from clearly incomplete to almost complete, and they are not always bilaterally symmetrical. Thus
Stigmothrips
cannot be distinguished satisfactorily from
Adraneothrips
and these are here placed into synonymy. Species of this genus commonly share a character state that is unusual among
Phlaeothripinae
, in that the pair of accessory setae on tergite IX between the major setae S1 and S2 are long (
Figs 38, 39
). This also occurs in several Australian species of
Hoplandrothrips
(Mound & Tree 2013)
. Despite the absence of the metathoracic sternopleural sutures in
Adraneothrips
species, these two genera are possibly related (Mound
et al
. 2013), although the species of
Adraneothrips
exhibit little of the sexual polymorphism that is so common among
Hoplandrothrips
species.
Diagnosis.
Head with cheeks slightly constricted behind large eyes; postocular setae usually arise behind inner margin of eyes (
Figs 16–25
); stylets usually about 1/3 of head width apart, retracted to postocular setae; antennae 8-segmented, III with 2 or 3 sensoria, IV with 3 or 4 (rarely 2); pronotum with 5 pairs of capitate setae, notopleural sutures incomplete or complete; basantra absent, mesopraesternum transverse; metathoracic sternopleural sutures absent; fore tarsal tooth usually not developed; fore wings weakly constricted medially, with or without duplicated cilia; pelta usually longer than wide (
Figs 26–30
) and bell-shaped; tergites II–VII with 2 pairs of wing-retaining setae, each posterior pair usually thicker than anterior pair (
Figs 27, 28
); tergite IX with accessory setae between S1 and S2 almost as long as S1 (
Figs 38, 39
); tube with straight sides, slightly shorter than head; male sternite VIII with or without pore plate (
Figs 33–36
).