Thripobius javae (Girault, 1917) Det. S. Triapitsyn, 2005

Triapitsyn, Serguei V., 2005, Revision of Ceranisus and the related thrips-attacking entedonine genera (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae) of the world, African Invertebrates 46, pp. 261-315 : 310-311

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.7909932

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6A2587D3-FF95-1D0D-FE45-1074FE482578

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Thripobius javae (Girault, 1917)
status

comb. nov.

Thripobius javae (Girault, 1917) View in CoL , comb. n.

Figs 61–63 View Figs 61–63

Epomphale javae Girault, 1917 b: 1 View in CoL . (Type locality: Salatiga , Java Island, Indonesia)

Thripoctenus maculatus Waterston, 1930: 243 View in CoL . Syn. n.

Thripobius semiluteus Boucek, 1976: 412 View in CoL , 413. Syn. n.

Ceranisus maculatus (Waterston) View in CoL : Husain & Khan 1986: 212; Loomans & van Lenteren 1995: 127–129,

196.

Thripobius semiluteus Boucek : Boucek 1988: 734; Loomans & van Lenteren 1995: 132–137, 197.

Ceranisus javae (Girault) : Loomans & van Lenteren 1995: 132, 196; Noyes 2002.

Diagnosis: Female. Well described and illustrated by Boucek (1976) (as T. semiluteus ). Antenna and forewing as in Figs 61 and 62 View Figs 61–63 , respectively.

Male. Similar to female except for normal sexually dimorphic features such as genitalia ( Fig. 63 View Figs 61–63 ). Quite rare.

Type material examined: Lectotype female of E. javae on slide ( USNM), here designated to avoid possible confusion regarding the status of the type specimens of this species, labelled as follows: 1. “ [red] “ Epomphale javae Gir. Type No. 20619 U.S. N.M”; 2. “ Epomphale javae Girault ^ LECTOTYPE (circled) Des. S. Triapitsyn 2004”; 3. “+ 2^ PARALECTOTYPES + heads (paralectotype) = Thripobius javae (Girault) Det. S. Triapitsyn ”. The lectotype specimen is complete but uncleared, mounted laterally under the same coverslip with 2 other original syntype specimens. Paralectotypes, here designated: 2 females mentioned above, on the same slide with the lectotype; 4 females (some of them incomplete) on one point ( USNM), originally labelled: 1. (red) “ 20619”; 2. “ Epomphale javae Gir. ^ Types” ; 14 females on one slide ( USNM), originally labelled: “ Epomphale javae Gir. ^ paratypes ” .

Allotype male of T. maculatus [ BMNH], dissected to many parts, on slide labelled: 1. “ Allotype. Thripoctenus maculatus Waterst. ơ.”; 2.”ex. Vine Thrips. India, Lyallur, Punjab. Botanical Gdns. 15.xi.29. 1930-18. M. Afzail Husain ”. Other paratypes of T. maculates [ BMNH] (examined): 5 females and 2 males on 4 slides, all dissected to many parts (some incomplete or broken), same data as the allotype.

Paratypes of T. semiluteus [ BMNH], labelled: “ India, Bangalore - Hebbal , ex. Heliothrips on Croton , I.1971, CIBC No. 29 CIE A4631”, 1^; “AFRICA, Sa~o Tomé, ex. Brachyurothrips anomalus on Hibiscus 5.ii.1975, J. Derron ”, 2^.

Other material examined: AUSTRALIA: New South Wales: Mudgee, Victoria Park, 13.iv.1994, S. Goodwin, M. Steiner, 2^ (“Assoc. with Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis on Viburnum ”). Northern Territory: Darwin, 17.ix.1994, M. Steiner, S. Goodwin, 2^ (“Assoc. with thrips on mango”) [ANIC]. Queensland: Kingfisher Park, 1 km N Julatten, 16°36'S: 145°20'E, 18.xi.1997, C.J. Burwell, 1^ [QMBA]. Pechey, 6.v.1941, A.R. Brimblecomb, 18^ (“Par. Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis ”). INDIA: Karnataka: Bangalore, xii.1955, 3^ (“Scale on Croton C. S. No. 168”) [USNM]. USA: California: Riverside Co., Riverside: UCR Lab. culture on H. haemorrhoidalis (28^ coll. 5.viii.1986 and 24^ coll. 19.x.1988) of Australia, New South Wales, origin, orig. coll. by G.A.C. Beattie 28.vii.1986, likely at Somersby [UCRC]. UCR Quarantine culture on H. haemorrhoidalis of Bahamas origin, 3^ [CNCI, UCRC]. UCR Lab. culture on H. haemorrhoidalis (coll. 19.x.1988) of Brazil, Minas Gerais, Lavras, origin, orig. reared by J.A. McMurtry 12.v.1988 from Heliothrips sp. , 9^ (Det. J. LaSalle, 1989 as T.semiluteus ) [UCRC]. UCR Lab.culture on H.haemorrhoidalis , 23.x.1989, 9^ [CNCI, UCRC].

Distribution:Apparently native and widespread in the Oriental and Australasian regions (except for the temperate zones) and also possibly in the Afrotropical region; introduced into some countries including the New World ( LaSalle & McMurtry 1989; McMurtry et al. 1991; Loomans & van Lenteren 1995; Kuslitzky 2003).

Hosts: Various Panchaetothripinae ( Thripidae ), as listed by Loomans and van Lenteren (1995) for T. semiluteus and C. maculatus .

Comments: As correctly predicted by Loomans and van Lenteren (1995), C. javae , C. maculatus and T. semiluteus turned out to belong to the same species, based on examination of their type specimens; hence the above synonymies under the earliest described species, T. javae .

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Eulophidae

Genus

Thripobius

Loc

Thripobius javae (Girault, 1917)

Triapitsyn, Serguei V. 2005
2005
Loc

Ceranisus maculatus (Waterston)

HUSAIN, T. & KHAN, M. Y. 1986: 212
1986
Loc

Thripoctenus maculatus

WATERSTON, J. 1930: 243
1930
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF