The genus Scirtothrips in Australia (Insecta, Thysanoptera, Thripidae)
Author
Hoddle, Mark S.
Author
Mound, Laurence A.
text
Zootaxa
2003
268
1
40
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.157021
161551bf-ef8c-4d6a-abe5-38226f776208
11755326
157021
Scirtothrips kirrhos
sp. nov.
[
Figs 13
,
42
]
Female macroptera
.
Colour
: Yellow, ocellar region brown, also anterior margin of mesonotum and median area of tergites II – VIII; antecostal ridges on tergites IIIVIII dark across full width of segments, on sternites IIIVII shaded full width of segments; forewings weakly shaded; antennal segment I pale, II variably light brown, III – IV mainly yellow with apex brown, VVIII dark.
Structure
: Vertex with closely spaced and transversely anastomosing striae, ocellar region with lines of sculpture scarcely visible; ocellar setae pair III close together, distance between their bases less than three times the diameter of the basal pores, arising almost on tangent joining anterior margins of posterior ocelli; two pairs of postocular setae. Pronotum with transverse striae regular and closely spaced; 45 anteromarginal setae, 1417 discal setae; 4 pairs of posteromarginal setae, S2 about twice the length of S1, S3 subequal to S1. Metanotal reticulation transverse anteriorly but almost equiangular on posterior half, median setae posterior of margin. Forewing scale with 4 marginal setae; first vein setae 1012+12+12+01+01; second vein 24 setae; basal posteromarginal fringe cilia wavy but distal cilia straight. Tergites IIIV median setae short, distance between bases about 3 times the length of these setae; tergal microtrichial fields with 3 discal setae; VIII and IX without discal microtrichia medially, posteromarginal comb on VIII complete. Sternites IIIVI with 3 pairs of posteromarginal setae; microtrichial fields weak, scarcely extending mesad of S3.
Measurements of
holotype
female
. Body length 1050. Head, length 60; width 150; p.o.
S1 20
. Pronotum, length 90; width 160; posteromarginal setae
S1 15
,
S2 30
. Forewing length 600. Antennal segments III – VI, 38, 35, 35, 40.
Male
macroptera
. Similar in colour and sculpture to female, but smaller; tergite IX with pair of rather short, pale drepanae; aedeagus without stout spines.
Holotype
female.
South
Australia
,
30 km
northwest of Whyalla, from
Acacia papyrocarpa
[Leguminosae],
29.xii.1997
(LAM 3375).
Paratypes
:
30 females
and
5 males
collected with
holotype
.
Material excluded from
type
series
:
Northern Territory
, Standley Chasm,
20 females
from
Acacia kempeana
,
31x1999
(LAM 3760); Serpentine Gorge,
3 females
from
A. kempeana
,
1xi1999
(LAM 3768); Standley Chasm,
35 females
2 males
from
Acacia macdonellensis
,
31x1999
(LAM 3759),
1xi1999
(LAM 3771), and
2xi1999
(LAM 3782).
Comments.
This is part of a species complex on
Acacia
foliage, together with the new species
S. akakia
,
S. moneres
and
S. quadriseta
, in which the ocellar region lacks definite sculpture, and the first abdominal tergite lacks setae, but in which the patterns of interpopulation variation are difficult to interpret. The nonparatypic specimens listed above are very similar to those of the
type
series but generally have none of the posteromarginal cilia on the forewing undulating, although a few have one or more of these cilia faintly wavy. Moreover, these specimens from central
Australia
have the pronotal striae more widely spaced than the members of the
type
series, and some of those from
Acacia macdonellensis
have pronotal setae S2 shorter than the width of the second antennal segment. Also, the specimens from
A. kempeana
and
A. macdonellensis
have the median setae on tergites four and five more closely spaced; the interval between them being little more than their length, and the posterior half of tergite IX usually bears many microtrichia. It is not possible to know if such small differences are stable population differences or merely the result of a localised founder effect. One female collected with the
holotype
contained in the abdomen two larval
Hymenoptera
–
Perilampidae
. This slide has been deposited with John Heraty, Department of Entomology, University of California at Riverside,
U.S.A.