Caliothrips tongi sp. n. (Thysanoptera, Thripidae) from China, and a dubious record of North American Bean Thrips
Author
Mound, Laurence A.
Author
Zhang, Hongrui
Author
Bei, Yawei
text
Zootaxa
2011
2736
57
62
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.276576
8b8e4b87-3d58-49ed-bba4-ec45371600d6
1175-5326
276576
Caliothrips tongi
sp. n.
Female macroptera. Body dark brown (
Fig. 1
), tarsi yellow, tibiae yellow with variable brown area medially, fore femora yellow distally, antennal segments III–V largely yellow with apices light brown; fore wing dark with two pale areas, sub-basal pale area short, apical dark area shorter than distal pale area (
Fig. 5
), clavus mainly pale; first vein with one sub-basal and one apical setae dark, second vein with 2 setae dark.
FIGURES 1–5
.
Caliothrips
species.
(1)
C. tongi
female.
(2)
C. tongi
, head.
(3)
C. tongi
, mesonotum & metanotum.
(4)
C. fasciatus
, head.
(5)
C. tongi
, fore wing.
Antennae 8-segmented (Fig. 10); III–IV with strongly constricted apical neck, sensoria forked, on III extending scarcely beyond base of IV, on IV extending to mid-point of V; microtrichia absent on III, VI, and dorsal surface of IV, present on ventral surface of IV and both surfaces of V; VIII much longer than VII. Head wider than long; cheeks convex, constricted to weak basal neck; vertex reticulate with markings inside the reticles, the margins of one row of submarginal reticles forming a transverse ridge (
Fig. 2
); three pairs of long pale postocular setae.
Pronotum, mesonotum and metanotum reticulate with many markings inside each reticle, setae long and pale; median metanotal setae wide apart and far from anterior margin (
Fig. 3
). Mesothoracic furca without spinula; metathoracic furca long and lyre-shaped, extending to mesothorax (Fig. 9).
Hind
coxae each with prominent internal coiled apodeme; tarsi long, 1-segmented. Fore wing first vein with about 5 setae at base, 2 setae near apex; second vein with 5 or 6 setae; posteromarginal cilia strongly wavy; clavus with 4 veinal but no discal setae.
FIGURES 6–10
.
Caliothrips
species.
(6)
C. tongi
, tergites IV–V.
(7)
C. fasciatus
, tergites IV–V.
(8)
C. tongi
, tergites VIII–X.
(9)
C. tongi
, male ventral surface.
(10)
C. tongi
, antenna.
Abdominal tergites I–VIII posterior margin with craspedum medially, forming long teeth laterally; median area of tergites reticulate, with one pair of minute setae, lateral reticulation longitudinal (Fig. 6); IX with no campaniform sensilla; X with median split complete (Fig. 8). Sternites II–VII with 3 pairs of marginal setae anterior to broad craspedum.
Measurements (
holotype
female in microns). Body length 1250. Head, length 85; maximum width 160; pair II postocular setae 30. Pronotum, length 115; maximum width 210. Metanotal median setae length 30. Forewing length 680. Abdominal tergite IV median setae 6; tergite
IX 80
, median setae 50, lateral setae 90; tergite
X 60
, terminal setae 50. Antennal segments III–VIII length, 50, 45, 35, 25, 12, 30.
Male macroptera. Colour and sculpture similar to female but smaller and more slender; tergite IX median discal setae shorter and stouter than posterior and midlateral pairs; sternites III–VII with slender transverse pore plate (Fig. 9).
Measurements (
paratype
male in microns). Body length 1000. Forewing length 550. Tergite IX, setae
S1 30
;
S2 40
;
S3 30
. Pore plate width, sternite
IV 75
; sternite
VII 60
.
Material studied.
Holotype
female:
CHINA
,
Zhejiang Province
, Cangnan County (
27°31'34.45''N
,
120°25'55.75''E
), from sweet potato (
Ipomoea batatas
) at
753 m
,
25.viii.2009
(Bei Yawei), in Yunnan Agricultural University, Kunming.
Paratypes
:
22 females
,
7 males
collected with
holotype
(deposited in Yunnan Agricultural University, Kunming; Academy of Sciences, Beijing; South
China
Agricultural University, Guangdong; Zhejiang Academy of Agriculture Science, Hangzhou; Australian National Insect Collection, Canberra);
Fujian Province
, Wuyi Mountain (
27°38'N
,
117°56'E
),
1 female
from unknown plant,
16.viii.1984
(Zhang Wei-qiu), South
China
Agricultural University, Guangdong.
Comments
. This new species is distinct within the genus
Caliothrips
because of the transverse ridge across the vertex (
Fig. 2
), moreover, the median areas of the abdominal tergites are distinctly reticulate (Fig. 6). These two character states readily distinguish the new species from
C. fasciatus
(
Figs 4
, 7). Moreover, the apical dark area and the sub-basal pale band of the fore wing of
C. tongi
are both considerably shorter than in
C. fasciatus
. Using the key to species in
Wilson (1975)
,
C. tongi
will run to the eastern North American
cinctipennis
, but that species has the head with uniform reticulation, and the males have small circular sternal pore plates.
The head of
Caliothrips
species typically has parallel-sided cheeks, and the sculpture on the vertex is uniform in appearance including the posterior margin, unlike
C. tongi
.
However, the following species exhibit an increasing tendency for the cheeks to be convex:
sudanensis
,
insularis
,
helini
. The first of these has the sculptured reticles on the vertex uniform in shape. In contrast,
helini
not only has the cheeks distinctly convex, but has a weakly differentiated band of reticles near the posterior margin, although this is not as sharply prominent as in
tongi
.
The only other species of
Caliothrips
recorded from
China
is
C. indicus
, from Yunnan and Guangdong (
Han, 1997
). The record of this species also requires confirmation through further field collections, as it is a potential pest of soy beans.