Anaphothrips occidentalis Pitkin, 1978
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2042.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/150587D9-FFF0-FF81-FF72-FDC5FD46C57A |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Anaphothrips occidentalis Pitkin |
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Anaphothrips occidentalis Pitkin View in CoL
( Figs 122–124 View FIGURES 120–129 )
Anaphothrips occidentalis Pitkin, 1978: 364 View in CoL
This Western Australian species has been studied from the flowers of various Haemodoraceae View in CoL around Perth, including species of Conostylus and Anigozanthos (Kangaroo Paws) View in CoL . It has also been studied from Kangaroo Paw flowers cultivated by commercial wildflower nurseries near Sydney and Gosford (New South Wales). It is a particularly large and dark species, with strikingly bicoloured fore wings, and very large pore plates in males ( Fig. 124 View FIGURES 120–129 ). It is unusual within this genus for the wide separation medially of the prosternal ferna. The holotype was collected in Western Australia near Busselton, Tuart Forest, from grasses, 28.ix.1967.
Female macroptera. Body and legs dark brown, tarsi yellow also apices of mid and hind tibiae and much of fore tibiae; antennal segments I–II and IV–IX dark brown, III yellow; fore wings pale with a dark submedian band, and a more diffuse dark area subapically on posterior margin; prominent body setae dark. Head as long as wide, smaller than pronotum; cheeks almost straight; mouth-cone long; eyes with 6 pigmented facets; ocellar setae III outside ocellar triangle, just anterior to hind ocelli; only 3 pairs of postocular setae. Antennae 9-segmented; segments III–IV with apex slightly constricted, sensorium forked; II without microtrichia, also III ventrally; VI with narrow pedicel; IX longer than VIII ( Fig. 122 View FIGURES 120–129 ). Pronotum weakly trapezoidal, medial sculpture weak. Metascutum reticulate, median setae behind anterior margin, MCS present. Prosternal ferna divided medially. Fore wing first vein with about 8 setae basally, then up to 10 setae placed irregularly; second vein with 11 to 16 setae including 1–2 setae basal to vein fork; clavus with 5–6 veinal setae and one basal seta. Abdominal tergites weakly sculptured laterally, without microtrichia; VIII posterior margin deeply concave, without comb ( Fig. 123 View FIGURES 120–129 ); X longer than IX.
Male aptera. Bicoloured, head and abdominal segments VI–X dark brown, remainder and legs variably yellowish brown; tergite IX medially with two pairs of short stout setae; sternites III–VII with very large Cshaped pore plate ( Fig. 124 View FIGURES 120–129 ).
Larva II. Body and legs yellow, tergite IX with faintly shaded posterior margin but no teeth; major setae slender trumpet shaped with apex asymmetric.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Anaphothrips occidentalis Pitkin
Mound, Laurence A. & Masumoto, Masami 2009 |
Anaphothrips occidentalis
Pitkin, B. R. 1978: 364 |