Ctenothrips distinctus (Uzel)

Wang, Zhaohong, Li, Yajin, Tong, Xiaoli & Mound, Laurence, 2020, Phylogenetic analysis of the Taeniothrips genus-group, with revision of the species of Ctenothrips and Vulgatothrips (Thysanoptera, Thripinae), Zootaxa 4750 (3), pp. 301-327 : 310

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4750.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A98C2B99-3D27-4696-8813-DE3BB2A893EC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3717840

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03828739-FFF0-FF9D-1DA1-FB6088FEE7E1

treatment provided by

Plazi (2020-03-12 08:37:00, last updated 2024-11-27 21:21:52)

scientific name

Ctenothrips distinctus (Uzel)
status

 

Ctenothrips distinctus (Uzel) View in CoL

Physopus distincta Uzel, 1895: 121 View in CoL .

( Figs 3 View FIGURES 2–15 , 16, 17, 21, 24, 28, 31 View FIGURES 16–31 , 44 View FIGURES 39–52 )

This species has been recorded widely in northern Eurasia, from Finland, Sweden, Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, Slovakia, Ukraine, Siberia, to Vladivostok and Korea ( Kucharczyk & Kucharczyk, 2008; Kudô, 1977), also Shandong province in China ( Han 1997). However, the collecting record from China might be unreliable, because Han (1997) described the species as having a mesosternal spinula, whereas distinctus has no mesosternal spinula ( Fig. 24 View FIGURES 16–31 ). This species was described with obvious reticulate sculpture on the pronotum ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 16–31 ), but visibility of these reticulations is highly dependent on the quality of slides, and the pronotal median area is always without sculpture ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 16–31 ). In the present study, specimens collected in Europe from Norway, Poland, Germany and Austria were studied, and all of them have dark brown femora and yellow tibiae ( Fig. 28 View FIGURES 16–31 ). In contrast, specimens from Vladivostok and South Korea have the tibiae yellowish brown. The distribution of distinctus extends across the Palaearctic from Europe to Siberia and possibly as far east as Vladivostok, and the distribution of bridwelli extends across the Nearctic from Boston to at least as far as west as Alberta. There thus seems to be a possibility that these colour variants represent a single Holarctic species that exists as a Holarctic circum-polar cline.

Material examined: AUSTRIA, 2 females from Convallaria , viii.1960 (H.P. Blütter) . GERMANY, Rhineland, Leverkusen, Berg Neukirchen , 2 males from Convallaria majalis , 17.viii.2001 (M. Boness). NORWAY, 14 females, 5 males from Convallaria majalis also 8 females, 2 males (S. Kobro). POLAND , 2 females, 11.vi.2018 (H. Kucharzyk). RUSSIA, Vladivostok, 2 females from Urtica , 5.v.2012 (A. Wells) . SOUTH KOREA, 3 females and 1 male from Lilium leaves, 8.viii.2009 (H. Kurahashi) . CHINA, Jilin, 2 females and 1 male from Rhododendron , 13.ix.2015 (J. Wang) .

Han, Y. F. (1997) Thysanoptera: Aeolothripidae, Thripidae and Phlaeothripidae. In: Yang, X. K. (Ed.), Insects of the Three Gorge Reservoir Area of Yangtze River. Chongqing Press, Chongqing, pp. 531 - 571.

Kucharczyk, H. & Kucharczyk, M. (2008) The Red List of Threatened Thrips Species (Thysanoptera, Insecta) of Middle-Eastern Poland. Acta Phytopathologica et Entomologica Hungarica, 43 (2), 297 - 305. https: // doi. org / 10.1556 / APhyt. 43.2008.2.13

Kudo, I. (1977) A new genus and two new species of Thripidae (Thysanoptera) from Nepal. Kontyu, 45, 1 - 8.

Uzel, H. (1895) Monographie der Ordnung Thysanoptera. Konigratz, Bohemia, 472 pp.

Gallery Image

FIGURES 2–15. Characters on head & pronotum. 2–9 Head: (2) C. kwanzanensis; (3) C. distinctus; (4) C. parisae; (5) C. transeolineae; (6) V. smilax; (7) V. dissimilis; (8) H. aino; (9) Ta. damansarae. 10–15 Head and pronotum: (10) Ay. chaetophora; (11) Ta. eucharii; (12) Te. frici; (13) C. bridwelli; (14) V. shennongjiaensis; (15) C. transeolineae.

Gallery Image

FIGURES 16–31. Characters on thorax. 16–19 pronotum: (16) C. distinctus; (17) C. distinctus; (18) C. transeolineae; (19) C. parisae. 20–23 Meso-and metanotum: (20) V. shennongjiaensis; (21) C. distinctus; (22) Ta. eucharii; (23) C. parisae. 24–26 Meso-and metasternum: (24) C. distinctus; (25) Ta. eucharii; (26) V. smilax. 27–28 Hind leg: (27) C. bridwelli; (28) C. distinctus. 29–31 Fore wing: (29) Ta. orionis; (30) C. parisae; (31) C. distinctus.

Gallery Image

FIGURES 39–52. Characters on abdomen. 39–40 Tergites: (39) Ta. orionis tergites III–IV; (40) Ta. eucharii tergites IV–VI; (41) V. shennongjiaensis tergite VIII; (42) Te. frici tergites VI–X; (43) C. kwanzanensis tergites V–VII; (44) C. distinctus VII–IX. 45–46 Male sternites: (45) C. parisae; (46) V. shennongjiaensis. 47–49 Male tergites IX: (47) C. kwanzanensis; (48) C. parisae; (49) C. transeolineae. 50–52 Sternites: (50) C. bridwelli; (51) Ta. picipes; (52) V. shennongjiaensis.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Thysanoptera

Family

Thripidae

SubFamily

Thripinae

Genus

Ctenothrips