Brachyurothrips anomalus Bagnall, 1921

Lima, Élison Fabrício B., O’Donnell, Cheryle A., Sousa, Yago Lucas C. & Zamar, María Inés, 2021, Identification of second instar larvae of Panchaetothripinae (Thysanoptera Thripidae) in Brazil and Argentina, Zootaxa 5047 (4), pp. 453-464 : 456

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5047.4.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AEE40945-007F-431F-AC14-820B915DF906

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5543067

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/723EF601-FFD3-AD22-FF2A-FF09FAB4C5C1

treatment provided by

Plazi (2021-10-01 06:47:08, last updated 2023-11-08 04:11:23)

scientific name

Brachyurothrips anomalus Bagnall
status

 

Brachyurothrips anomalus Bagnall View in CoL

( Figs 6 View FIGURES 1–15 , 24, 35 View FIGURES 22–42 )

Body color yellow. Antennal segment III with setae longer than the length of the segment and reaching segment VII ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 1–15 ). Body dorsal setae long and acute 1.5x to 2 x the length (anterior/posterior) of the segment. Head setae D1 inserted posteriorly to setae D4. Pronotum with no sclerotized blotch. Abdominal tergite II with no spiracle visible; segment X with six anal setae about 1.3x longer than the length of the segment ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 22–42 ). Spiracles small, present only on the thorax and abdominal segment VIII with, with no pores within 4-6 facets ( Fig. 24 View FIGURES 22–42 ). One synonym of this species has been described from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from an unidentified pepper, but larvae were not examined. The characterization above was based on specimens from Solanum from Boa Esperança, São Tomé and Príncipe (USNM).

Gallery Image

FIGURES 1–15. Panchaetothripinae second instar larvae (except where noted). Alive individuals 1–4: (1) Dinurothrips hookeri; (2) Dinurothrips vezenyii; (3) Helionothrips errans; (4) Retithrips syriacus; (5) Selenothrips rubrocinctus (adults and pupae). Antenna 6–14: (6) Brachyurothrips anomalus; (7) Bradinothrips musae; (8) Caliothrips insularis; (9) Caliothrips phaseoli; (10) Dinurothrips hookeri; (11) Elixothrips brevisetis; (12) Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis; (13) Heliothrips longisensibilis; (14) Heliothrips zucchi. (15) Bradinothrips musae head and pronotum.

Gallery Image

FIGURES 22–42. Panchaetothripinae second instar larvae. (22) Caliothrips phaseoli meso- and metanotum. (23) Heliothrips zucchi (leg). Spiracle 24–34: (24) Brachyurpthrips anomalus (tergite VIII); (25) Caliothrips phaseoli (mesonotum); (26) Dinurothrips hookeri (mesonotum); (27) Dinurothrips hookeri (tergite VIII); (28) Helionothrips errans (mesonotum); (29) Helionothrips errans (tergite VIII); (30) Elixothrips brevisetis (mesonotum); (31) Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis (mesonotum); (32) Hercinothrips bicinctus (mesonotum); (33) Hercinothrips bicinctus (tergite II); (34) Retithrips syriacus (mesonotum). Abdominal tergites 35–42: (35) Brachyurothrips anomalus (IX–X); (36) Dinurothrips hookeri (VIII–X); (37) Dinurothrips vezenyii (IX-X), (38) Hercinothrips bicinctus (VIII–X); (39) Helionothrips errans (III–X); (40) Hercinothrips femoralis (VIII–X); (41) Retithrips syriacus (IX–X); (42) Selenothrips rubrocinctus (VI–X).