Mesothrips Zimmermann, 1900

Mound, Laurence A. & Minaei, Kambiz, 2007, Australian thrips of the Haplothrips lineage (Insecta: Thysanoptera), Journal of Natural History 41 (45 - 48), pp. 2919-2978 : 2965-2966

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930701783219

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038987F5-960D-FF31-FE1C-FD94FDE5FAC2

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Mesothrips Zimmermann
status

 

Mesothrips Zimmermann View in CoL

Mesothrips Zimmermann 1900, p 12 View in CoL . Type species: Mesothrips jordani Zimmermann. View in CoL

A total of 44 species is described in this genus, all from South-East Asia, particularly Indonesia, India, and Vietnam, but with two from Australia and one from Guam. In the absence of revisionary studies the significance of many of these species must remain in doubt, because one species discussed below is now recognised as highly variable. Moreover, although they are all ‘‘gall thrips’’ there appears to be little evidence that any of them induce galls. These thrips are commonly found in association with other thrips species, and they are probably phytophagous kleptoparasites rather than gall inducers. This suggestion is supported by the fact that both sexes vary greatly in body size, as in the related genus Euoplothrips View in CoL . Although apparently differing in biology, Mesothrips species are closely related to those of Dolichothrips View in CoL , as discussed above. Two species have been described from Australia, but these are here considered synonymous with the type species of the genus.

Recognition

Dark brown species exhibiting size-correlated polymorphism in fore tarsal tooth development; antennae eight-segmented, III with three sensoria, IV with four sensoria; head sharply constricted to basal neck ( Figure 8 View Figures 1–15 ) with a few small stout setae on cheeks, maxillary stylets retracted about half-way to postocular setae; prosternal basantra small, mesopresternum divided; fore tarsal tooth large in large individuals of both sexes; fore wing constricted medially; tergites II–V with additional sigmoid setae lateral to the major wingretaining setae.

Mesothrips jordani Zimmermann

Mesothrips jordani Zimmermann 1900, p 16 View in CoL .

Mesothrips australiae Hood 1918, p 139 View in CoL . syn. n.

Mesothrips bianchii Ananthakrishnan 1976, p 191 View in CoL . syn. n.

The character states given for M. bianchii View in CoL by Ananthakrishnan do not distinguish this from the species described by Hood, and neither of these can be distinguished satisfactorily from the widespread Oriental species M. jordani Zimmermann. In View in CoL describing the species, Hood (1918) stated that M. australiae View in CoL was perhaps merely a race of M. jordani View in CoL , and in view of the wide range of variation within samples from any single locality there is no good evidence that more than one species is represented by these three names. Moreover, considering the variation that has been observed in samples both from Australia and from Kuala Lumpur, some of the other nominal species recognised in this genus by Ananthakrishnan (1976) are likely to be synonymous.

Prof. Shuji Okajima of Tokyo kindly provided the following information concerning variation in length (in Mm) of the pronotal posteroangular setae amongst samples of M. jordani that he has collected in South-East Asia: Bali (17 females) 40–85; Singapore (two females) 65–80; Taiwan (about 50 females) 80–130; India (one female) 60; Japan Ryukyus (one large female) 130–140. The species is known from India, West Malaysia, Indonesia, Taiwan, China, and southern Japan (Ryukyu Islands) ( Okajima 2006). In Australia, it has been taken widely in the coastal rainforests of Queensland, including the Botanic Gardens at Mt Cootha, Brisbane, at Noosa Head, Gordonvale, and Atherton. Although living in leaf-roll galls of Ficus species , the wide range of structural variation in both sexes suggests that this thrips is a phytophagous kleptoparasite in the galls of Gynaikothrips species , rather than a gall-inducer.

Podothrips Hood

Podothrips Hood 1913, p 67 View in CoL . Type species: Podothrips semiflavus Hood. View in CoL

The members of this worldwide genus all appear to be coccid predators living on Poaceae View in CoL . An account of 18 species in this genus was given by Ritchie (1974), including a list of four generic synonyms, although subsequently four further species have been described from South-East Asia and two from New Zealand. The Australian fauna of this genus now comprises 10 species plus the Asian species, P. lucasseni View in CoL . Nine of the 10 species constitute a single lineage, the P. australis View in CoL group, in that they share the following character states: fore tibial inner margin with sub-apical setal-bearing tubercle but no apical tooth; antennal segments III and IV each with two sensoria; fore wing with no duplicated cilia; tergite VII with wing-retaining setae small and straight. The 10th species is divergent, in that it is apterous, and antennal segment III lacks sensoria and has a pronounced sub-basal ring, but the fore tibial sub-apical tubercle is similar to the other members of the P. australis View in CoL group. As is typical of Podothrips View in CoL , in all of the Australian species the prosternal basantra are longer than wide, and the pronotal anteromarginal setae are minute. The range of body colour within the genus is remarkable, from largely clear yellow to uniformly brown, but with most Australian species strikingly bicoloured. As in Karnyothrips melaleucus View in CoL , the anal setae of most species are particularly long.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Thysanoptera

Family

Phlaeothripidae

Loc

Mesothrips Zimmermann

Mound, Laurence A. & Minaei, Kambiz 2007
2007
Loc

Mesothrips bianchii

Ananthakrishnan TN 1976: 191
1976
Loc

Mesothrips australiae

Hood JD 1918: 139
1918
Loc

Podothrips Hood 1913 , p 67

Hood JD 1913: 67
1913
Loc

Mesothrips

Zimmermann A 1900: 12
1900
Loc

Mesothrips jordani

Zimmermann A 1900: 16
1900
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