A revision of and key to the world species of Mycterothrips Trybom (Thysanoptera, Thripidae)
Author
Okajima, Masami Masumoto And Shûji
text
Zootaxa
2006
2006-07-17
1261
1261
1
90
journal article
11755334
Mycterothrips desleyae
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 56–59
)
Description
.
Female
. Distended body length about
1.3 mm
. Body yellowish brown to brownish yellow, pronotum with brown patches, mesonotum shaded at anterior margin and each side of middle, metanotum shaded at each side; abdominal terga brown at middle and at anterior half of each side, laterotergites brown on anterior half; antennal segment I
yellow, II to VIII uniformly brown to dark brown; all legs yellow; fore wings and scale uniformly brown; prominent body setae dark.
FIGURES 56–57
.
Mycterothrips desleyae
sp. nov.
Female: (56) Head &pronotum; (57) Terga & left laterotergites VI–VII (sculpture on right side omitted).
Head 1.4–1.6 times as wide as long, cheeks straight. Ocellar setae III situated between posterior ocelli and 4.0–4.9times as long as distance between their bases; postocular setae I the longest (
Fig. 56
). Antennal segment III the longest, III and IV strongly narrowed into necklike distal third, VI tapering in distal half (
Fig. 58
). Antennal segments I to VII length/width: 0.9, 1.4–1.5, 2.5–3.0, 2.4–2.5, 1.9, 2.3–2.7, 1.0, 2.5–3.5.
Pronotum 1.2–1.3 times as wide as long, weakly sculptured medially, with 43–46 discal setae (
46 in
holotype
); posteroangular setae I about 1.1 times as long as setae
II
and 0.4–0.5 times as long as pronotal median length; posteromarginal setae I 1.3–1.9 times as long as setae
II
and 0.3 times as long as pronotal median length (
Fig. 56
). Mesonotum without
CPS
anteromedially; median pair of setae near posterior margin. Metascutum irregularly reticulated medially; median pair of setae near anterior margin and 0.5–0.7 times as long as metascutal median length. Fore wings usually with 30–34 setae on costal vein (
holotype
30 in
left,
31 in
right), 12–15setae on second vein (
holotype
12 in
left,
14 in
right)
.
Abdominal terga and laterotergites with numerous ciliate microtrichia on lines of sculpture, a few lines of sculpture lines slightly extending mesad of B2 setae on terga IV to VII, posterior margin of terga II to VII with microtrichia developed laterally (
Fig. 57
); tergum II with four lateral marginal setae; terga VII to VIII with B4 setae minute, tergum VI B4 setae not minute (often slightly short at one side, but stout) (
Fig. 57
); tergum IX with both anterior and posterior pairs of CPS, B1 setae, B2 setae and B3 setae 1.0–1.1 times, 1.3 times and 1.0–1.1 times as long as tergum IX median length, respectively; tergum X with median slit at apex; sterna without discal setae. Ovipositor 1.7–2.0 times as long as pronotal median length.
FIGURES 58–59
.
Mycterothrips desleyae
sp. nov.
Antenna (right): (58) Female; (59) Male.
Measurements
(in µm).
Holotype
(female). Distended body length 1330. Head length (width across cheeks) 97 (138), compound eye dorsal length (width) 58 (38), ocellar setae III length (interval) 49 (10). Pronotal median length (width) 125 (163), posteroangular setae I length 59, setae II length 53, posteromarginal setae I length 38, setae II length 29. Metascutal median length 78; median setae length 55. Fore wings length 720. Tergum IX median length 80, B1 setae length 83, B2 seta length 105, B3 setae length 90. Ovipositor length 255. Antennal segments I to VIII length (width) as follows: 25 (28), 35 (25), 50 (20), 48 (20), 33 (18), 45 (20), 8 (8), 15 (5).
Male
. Macropterous. Distended body length about
0.9 mm
. Antennae 8segmented, segment VI distinctly longer than that of female, 0.5–0.6 times as long as combined length of I to V, with numerous long setae and without microtrichia (
Fig. 59
). Abdominal tergum IX without SB1 setae near posterior margin; sterna with discal setae. Hypomere slightly expanded at apex.
Measurements
(in µm).
Paratype
(male). Distended body length 865. Head length (width across cheeks) 74 (120), compound eye dorsal length (width) 48 (40), ocellar setae III length (interval) 42 (13). Pronotal median length (width) 88 (128), posteroangular setae I length 43, setae II length 44, posteromarginal setae I length 28, setae II length 18. Metascutal median length 58; median setae length 35. Fore wings length 565. Antennal segments I to VIII length (width) as follows: 25 (25), 30 (23–25), 38 (18), 33 (18), 18 (15– 18), 85–88 (18), 5–8 (8), 10–15 (5).
Type series
.
Australia
:
Holotype
female,
Queensland
, Brisbane, Gap Creek Reserve, on
Clerodendrum floribundum
[
Verbenaceae
],
7xi2005
, D. Tree.
Paratypes
:
4 females
and
3 males
, same data as
holotype
.
1 female
, same host and locality,
12xi2005
, D. Tree.
Nonparatypic specimens
:
Desley Tree found this species breeding in substantial numbers, between
October 2005
and
January 2006
, on the leaves of several trees of
Clerodendrum floribundum
at the
type
locality in
western Brisbane
,
Australia
.
Small
numbers of adults were also taken from the leaves of the same species of tree at
Cooloola National Park
,
120km
north of
Brisbane
, in
February
and
March
, 2006.
Slides
of nonparatypic specimens, taken from the same trees as the
types
, are preserved in the collections of the
Queensland
Department of Primary Industries
,
Indooroopilly
, and in the
Australian National Insect Collection
,
Canberra
.
The
holotype
and some
paratypes
are deposited in
ANIC
,
Canberra
and some
paratypes
are deposited in
Queensland Dept Primary Industries
insect collections,
Brisbane
and
Tokyo
University of Agriculture
,
Atsugi
,
Japan
.
Comments
. This new species is very similar to
M. glycines
. In particular, the male has the typical intermediate
type
of antennal segment VI as in that species. However,
M. desleyae
differs from
M. glycines
as follows: females, antennal segment III uniformly brown, III and IV with apical neck more strongly narrowed, VI slightly shorter than IV, B4 setae on tergum VI not minute; males, antennal segment V
18µm
long, about as long as wide, in contrast to about
27µm
long, more than 1.3 times as long as wide in
M. glycines
(
Fig. 83
).
Etymology
. In reference to the entomologist who collected this species, Mrs. Desley Tree, of the
Queensland
Department of Primary Industries.