The genus Thrips (Thysanoptera, Thripidae) in Australia, New Caledonia and New Zealand Author Mound, Laurence A. Honorary Research Fellow, CSIRO Entomology, GPO Box 1700, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia, and Scientific Associate, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London [e-mail: laurence. mound @ csiro. au]. Yokohama Plant Protection Station, Shiníyamashita, 1 - 16 - 10, Yokohama, 238 - 0801, Japan [e-mail masumotom @ pps. go. jp] Author Masumoto, Masami text Zootaxa 2005 2005-07-22 1020 1 1 64 https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.1020.1.1 journal article 10.11646/zootaxa.1020.1.1 1175­5334 5049482 42460838-51AB-4F44-9E0B-7AC72EE4A575 Thrips coprosmae Mound Thrips coprosmae Mound, 1978: 618 Diagnosis : Colour variable, light to dark brown or bicoloured, forewing pale, antennal segments III–VII darker brown than I–II. Antennae 7­segmented; ocellar setae III relatively long and arising outside ocellar triangle ( Fig. 15 ). Pronotum almost without sculpture; fore tarsus with pre­apical claw. Metanotum with irregular reticulation ( Fig. 16 ), median setae behind anterior margin, campaniform sensilla absent. Forewing first vein with complete row of setae; clavus with 5 marginal setae, termina and subterminal setae sub­equal. Abdominal tergite II with 3 lateral setae; tergite VIII with marginal comb complete, microtrichia irregular and in groups; pleurotergites with 2 or 3 discal setae ( Fig. 17 ), sternite II with 3 pairs of marginal setae, sternites III–VII with 5 to 10 discal setae. Breeding : Adults and larvae have been taken from the young leaf buds of Coprosma robusta , C. rotundifolia and C. pseudocuneata ( Martin & Mound, 2005 ) . Distribution : A New Zealand endemic, this species is widespread in both North and South Islands. Relationships : A member of the Thrips obscuratus group ( Mound, 2005 ), in which five species from New Zealand and three from New Caledonia share the unusual apomorphy of the second abdominal sternite bearing three pairs of marginal setae.