Dinurothrips hookeri Hood, 1913

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.5543083

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/723EF601-FFD3-AD25-FF2A-F8CEFB74C551

treatment provided by

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

scientific name

Dinurothrips hookeri Hood
status

 

Dinurothrips hookeri Hood View in CoL

( Figs 1, 10 View FIGURES 1–15 , 17 View FIGURES 16–21 , 26, 27, 36 View FIGURES 22–42 )

Head pale, pronotum pale with anterior margin red, meso- and metanotum pale with red line posteromedially, abdominal segments I–VIII pale with red internal pigment, IX–X dark brown (black in alive individuals; brown in washed specimens) ( Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1–15 ). Antennal segment III with setae much shorter than the length of the segment ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 1–15 ). Dorsal setae with apex expanded. Head setae D3 expanded; setae D1 inserted anteriorly to setae D4 ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 16–21 ). Pronotum with sclerotized blotches (pale in washed specimens). Abdominal tergite II with a pair of spiracles; segments IX–X completely sclerotized; segment X with six anal setae shorter than the segment length ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 22–42 ). Spiracles with facets with one to four pores ( Figs 26, 27 View FIGURES 22–42 ). Larvae II have been studied from Brazil from the states of São Paulo, Acre and Piauí from plants such as Impatiens balsamina , Mentha sp. and grasses (CHNUFPI).

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 16–21. Panchaetothripinae second instar larvae. Head and pronotum 16–20: (16) Caliothrips phaseoli; (17) Dinurothrips hookeri; (18) Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis; (19) Hoodothrips lineatus; (20) Parthenothrips dracaenae. (21) Caliothrips insularis meso- and metanotum.

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).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Thysanoptera

Family

Thripidae

Genus

Dinurothrips