Liothrips elongatus, Dang & An & Mound & Qiao, 2024

Dang, Lihong, An, Yiyan, Mound, Laurence A. & Qiao, Gexia, 2024, Leaf-feeding species of the genus Liothrips from China (Thysanoptera, Phlaeothripinae), Zootaxa 5419 (1), pp. 53-84 : 65-66

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5419.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:23F0CA38-AA36-4B65-9D76-E798882ED1EF

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10781956

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/715E87B3-FFF2-FFAA-FF0C-FA2BFB06D599

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Liothrips elongatus
status

sp. nov.

Liothrips elongatus View in CoL sp. n.

( Figs 3 View FIGURES 1–8 , 31 View FIGURES 22–41 , 45 View FIGURES 42–46 , 54, 59 View FIGURES 53–60 , 77 View FIGURES 69–79 , 95 View FIGURES 89–96 )

Female macroptera. Body brown; all femora brown, fore tibiae light brown medially with base and apex yellow, mid and hind tibiae brown with apices yellow, all tarsi yellow; antennal segments I–II brown, but II pale at apex, III–IV largely yellow with apices shaded, V–VI yellow at basal half, shaded at apical half, VII–VIII lightly brown ( Fig. 31 View FIGURES 22–41 ); major setae dark; fore wing pale, shaded at base, with a median dark stripe.

Head twice as long as wide ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1–8 ); postocular setae blunt, scarcely reaching to posterior margin of eyes; eyes equal dorsally and ventrally; maxillary stylets retracted to lower part of head, not reaching postocular setae ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1–8 ); mouth cone short and round. Antennal segments elongate, III about 4 times as long as apical width ( Fig. 31 View FIGURES 22–41 ); IV with 3 major sense cones, VIII distinct from VII. Pronotum transverse, with 4 pairs of long blunt setae, am scarcely larger than discal setae ( Fig. 45 View FIGURES 42–46 ); surface weakly sculptured. All legs slender. Fore wing with 3 blunt sub-basal setae arising in straight line, almost equal length, with 14 duplicated cilia. Mesonotum transversely reticulate, lateral setae well-developed, blunt. Metanotum weakly sculptured with longitudinal reticles, major setae slender and acute ( Fig. 77 View FIGURES 69–79 ). Mesopresternum with paired lateral triangles ( Fig. 54 View FIGURES 53–60 ), metathoracic sternopleural sutures short. Pelta broadly triangular, weakly reticulate, with pair of CPS ( Fig. 77 View FIGURES 69–79 ); tergite II with 9–12 pairs of lateral setae; tergite VIII posterolateral setae well-developed, shorter than posteroangles; tergite IX setae S1–S3 slightly shorter than tube, acute at apex; tube shorter than head, anal setae slightly shorter than tube.

Measurements (holotype female in microns). Body length 3900. Head length (maximum width) 450 (215); postocular setae length 65; antennal segments I–VIII length (width): 50 (45), 70 (35), 155 (35), 150 (45), 140 (30), 125 (30), 75 (25), 40 (15); sense cone on III length 65. Pronotum length (width) 200 (350); am 5, aa 40, ml 40, epim 150, pa 120. Fore wing length 1500; sub-basal setae S1 90, S2 130, S3 130. Tergite VIII posterolateral setae 115; tergite IX setae S1 330, S2 300, S3 225; tube length 370, basal width 95, apical width 55; anal setae length 310.

Male macroptera. Similar to female in colour and sculpture; pronotal am slightly short than aa, but much shorter than other major setae; abdominal tergite II with 8–9 pairs of lateral setae; tergite IX setae S2 short, slightly blunt at apex; sternite VIII largely occupied by pore plate ( Fig. 95 View FIGURES 89–96 ).

Measurements (paratype male in microns). Body length 3350. Head length (maximum width) 390 (200); postocular setae length 65. Pronotum length (width) 180 (325); am 15, aa 25, ml 75, epim 130, pa 105. Tergite IX setae S1 310, S2 100, S3 360; tube length 335, basal width 95, apical width 50; anal setae length 310.

Specimens studied. Holotype female, China, Yunnan, Kunming garden, 29.ix.2010, Laurence Mound ( SNUT).

Paratypes: 2 males with the same data as holotype ( SNUT & ANIC); Yunnan, Chenggong , 1 male, 8.viii.2010, Hongrui Zhang ( ANIC) .

Etymology. The species epithet refers to the elongate head and antennae.

Comments. This is the second known species with tergite II bearing numerous discal setae laterally, and as in L. takahashii it has short stylets. However, it has an elongate head and antennae ( Figs 3 View FIGURES 1–8 , 31 View FIGURES 22–41 ), short postocular setae ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1–8 ) and small pronotal aa and am setae ( Fig. 45 View FIGURES 42–46 ) and is easily distinguished from L. takahashii .

ANIC

Australian National Insect Collection

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF