Thysanoptera: Thrips of Guam
Author
Moulton, Dudley
text
1942
1942-12-31
Bernice P. Bishop Museum Bulletin
Insects of Guam I
7
16
http://hbs.bishopmuseum.org/pubs-online/pdf/b172p7-16.pdf
book chapter
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3634035
9c8d5683-76c1-4938-aede-b7ad5391b6b2
3634035
8.
Thrips
leucaenae
,
new species
.
Female
holotype
: head and thorax golden brown
with
back of head lighter and sides of pterothorax darker, abdomen brown; antenna! segments 1, 2, and 4 to
7
brown with extreme bases of 4 and
5
lighter, segment 3 yellow; legs yellow with outer middle portions of middle and hind femora
darkened
with brown; wings brownish, lighter at base;
prominent
spines on body and wings brown; crescents of ocelli dark orange.
Head
clearly wider
than
long, cheeks arched, back of head cross striate; ocelli large,
with
a stout spine immediately in front of and behind each posterior ocellus; fifth antenna! segment broadly joined to six.
Prothorax
faintly cross striate and
rather
conspicuously spinose; posterior margin normally with
three
inner spines on either side. Spines of!}1etanotal plate placed immediately on the anterior margin. Spines on fore vein of forewing as follows: (
right
wing) four basal, followed by njne continuing to past middle of wing, two and one distal; (left wing) four basal, followed by six and then 1-1-1-1; hind vein
with
fifteen-sixteen. Abdominal segments 3 to
7
each with a dark
brown transverse
line near anterior margin; comb on posterior margin of segment 8 complete but weak; tenth segment with complete dorsal suture.
Total body length
1.04 mm
.; head length
0.13 mm
., width
0.16 mm
.; prothorax length
0.14 mm
., width
0.20 mm
.; spines on posterior angles of prothorax, outer 66, inner 82 microns; on ninth abdominal segment 106 and on
tenth
113 microns. Antenna! segments, length (width): II, 33 (24); III, 40 (18); IV, 53 (16);
V
, 40 (16);
VI
, 50 (16); VII, 16 microns.
Piti
,
May 1
,
June 22
, in
flowers of
Leucaena
glauca
(5464) and
Barringtonia raceniosa
(5474),
holotype
female
, five para type females, Swezey
.
The spines of fore veins of forewings of the
paratypes
show much
varia
tion, one
paratype
having four basal followed by a second series of four and
with three distal. A second
paratype
, on the right wing, has four basal, four - median and four widely
scattered
distal spines, while on left wing there are four basal, followed by six reaching to middle of wing and four scattered in distal half.
T. leucaenae
is most closely related to
T
.
hawaiiensis imitator Friesner
(
albipes
Bagnall) and might possibly be a variation of this species. However until more specimens are available for comparison, it seems advisable to hold it as a separate species. I have examined a long series of
T
.
hawaiiensis
from the Hawaiian islands,
China
and
Japan
and the arrangement of spines on the fore vein is consistent with the usual two groups of three or four at the base and the three, sometimes four, distal spines. The basal spines invariably encl opposite the second or
third
spine in the series on the posterior vein, never extending to or beyond the middle of the wing. The posterior angle spines of the
prothorax
also are longer in
leucaenae
than
in
hawaiiensis
or its
variety
imitator
.