What is a genus-interpreting structural diversity among species of urothripine Phlaeothripinae (Thysanoptera)
Author
Mound, Laurence A.
Author
Lima, Élison Fabrício B.
Author
O’Donnell, Cheryle A.
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-07-24
5319
1
91
102
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5319.1.6
journal article
57776
10.11646/zootaxa.5319.1.6
55424897-b73c-4e41-9aee-f5ad464d4275
1175-5326
8182213
F74A47A2-8711-45A5-856E-804C16B3C4C1
Urothrips
Bagnall
Urothrips
Bagnall, 1909: 126
.
Type
species
Urothrips paradoxus
Bagnall.
Coxothrips
Bournier, 1963: 75
.
Type
species
Coxothrips reticulatus
Bournier. Synonymised
by
Ulitzka & Mound, 2014
.
Ananthakrishnaniella
Stannard, 1970: 118
.
Type
species
Ananthakrishnaniella tarai
Stannard. Synonymised
by Bhatti, 1998: 178.
Biconothrips
Stannard, 1970: 121
.
Type
species
Biconothrips reedi
Stannard. Synonymised
by
Ulitzka & Mound, 2014
.
Within the key to genera of urothripines presented by
Mound (1972)
, one group of four genera was distinguished by the following three character-states: absence of elongate setae on anterior margin of head; presence of prominent external fore tarsal hamus; reduction of prosternal basantra (=praepectus) to a pair of small triangles placed laterally. However, there is considerable overlap in character states amongst the nine species involved under these four generic names, and
Ulitzka and Mound (2014)
decided to include all nine species within a single genus,
Urothrips
. The alternative to accepting a single genus to encompass the range of variation amongst these species would be to recognise more than four monotypic genera, each of which would be supported by a single autapomorphy with no obvious systematic significance. The problem of distinguishing genera based on characters that seem to vary progressively in fusion or size increases when all 12 of the species now listed in
Urothrips
are considered. In one of these species,
U. lancangensis
, the fore tarsal hamus is very small, and in
U. calvus
it appears to be quite undeveloped. Similarly, the only available specimen of
U. bagnalli
Trybom
is uncleared but seems to have transverse basantra. At species level within the genus there appear to be further problems, in that populations of
paradoxus
in Africa differ in colour details, as is known amongst populations of
reedi
in
Australia
(
Mound 1972
).