Dendrothrips latimaculatus Nonaka & Okajima, 1991

Wang, Zhaohong, Mound, Laurence A. & Tong, Xiaoli, 2019, Character state variation within Dendrothrips (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) with a revision of the species from China, Zootaxa 4590 (2), pp. 231-248 : 235-236

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4590.2.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1AA4DCC9-0C1F-4A14-8A40-6B9EF6FFE8E4

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5936056

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E5714F1D-B750-A063-9ADF-FD5AFC3D4933

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Dendrothrips latimaculatus Nonaka & Okajima
status

 

Dendrothrips latimaculatus Nonaka & Okajima View in CoL

( Figs 1 View FIGURES 1–11 , 20 View FIGURES 12–23 , 24, 27–28 View FIGURES 24–31 , 39 View FIGURES 38–40 , 42–43 View FIGURES 41–49 , 52–56)

Dendrothrips latimaculatus Nonaka & Okajima, 1991: 107 View in CoL .

Dendrothrips mendax View in CoL ; sensu Zhang, 1982: 53, not Bhatti, 1971.

This species has been found in South China specifically on the leaves of Osmanthus fragrans View in CoL [ Oleaceae View in CoL ]. This is a common ornamental plant, and is also an important spice crop. In Japan, the thrips was recorded on Fraxinus griffithii View in CoL from Okinawa-ken, and this suggests it is associated with Oleaceae View in CoL in Asian tropical areas. In Guangzhou, males of latimaculatus View in CoL occur only during October, before the flowering of these plants. It clearly breeds on leaves, because after removing all adults and larvae from leaves further larvae were found to emerge on the same leaves. The record from China of mendax Bhatti View in CoL was based on female specimens collected from the leaves of O. fragrans ( Zhang 1982) View in CoL . Direct comparison of those specimens with latimaculatus View in CoL makes it clear that these were misidentification of mendax View in CoL . A further species to be considered, cibarius View in CoL , was described from 110 females from leaves of one unidentified tree in Bombay, India ( Ananthakrishnan 1965). According to the original illustrations, cibarius View in CoL and latimaculatus View in CoL share similar fore wing color, as well as sculpture on the head, pronotum and tergite VIII. Osmanthus fragrans View in CoL is widely planted as an ornamental and spice crop, and there is a possibility that cibarius View in CoL may be the same species as latimaculatus View in CoL .

Female: Body brown, head and thorax darker than abdomen, tergites IV–VI paler laterally with 2 pairs of brown spots (Figs 52, 54); antennal segments I–II and VI–VIII brown, V pale brown, III–IV yellow ( Figs 42 View FIGURES 41–49 ); fore wing colour patterns complex ( Fig. 27 View FIGURES 24–31 ), basal fourth pale with brown spots, sub-basal fourth brown but slightly pale medially, apical half with two white and two brown areas alternating, apex brown; clavus brown at basal half. Head and pronotum reticulate with internal dots ( Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1–11 ). Mesonotum with transverse anastomosing striae; metanotum medially sculptured with irregular reticles bearing internal dots, lateral reticles bearing winkles ( Fig. 24 View FIGURES 24–31 ). Fore wing without uniform microtrichia, vein setae small, first vein with 15–17 setae distributed discontinuous, second vein with 3–5 setae placed on brown areas. Abdominal tergites II–III and VII–VIII reticulate with numerous dots, IV–VI anterior 1/3 with transverse anastomosing striae bearing few dots, posterior 2/3 with dots on brown areas, different tubercles on yellow areas ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 12–23 ); sternites reticulate with many longitudinal linear ridges, segments VII with 3 pairs of marginal setae in front of posterior margin.

Male: Paler and smaller than female (Fig. 53). Head, thorax and abdominal tergites II–IV & VII lateral third brown, tergites V–VI and VIII–X pale yellow. Antennal segments II–III pale, I & IV pale brown, V–VIII brown ( Fig. 43 View FIGURES 41–49 ). Legs pale brown with tarsi yellow. Fore wing pale at basal quarter, medially and sub-apically ( Fig. 28 View FIGURES 24–31 ), hind vein with 2 setae on distal half. Abdominal tergites II–IV & VII sculptured with reticles bearing inner dots, tergites V–VI with tubercles ( Fig. 39 View FIGURES 38–40 ).

Larva. The first instar larvae completely pale; second instar pale but posterior half of mesonotum and anterior half of metanotum, abdominal tergites I–III and VII–VIII with bright red areas (Fig. 56).

Material examined. Paratype female of latimaculatus , JAPAN (in ANIC), Okinawa-ken, Ishigaki-jima Island, collected from leaves of Ficus erectus [ Moraceae ], 11.i.1991 (S. Okajima). CHINA (in SCAU), Guangdong, Guangzhou , SCAU (23°09'N, 113°21'E), 2 females collected from Osmanthus fragrans [ Oleaceae ], 27.xii.2012 (Shulan Yang); 12 females, 24.ix.2015, 17 females, 30.ix.2015, 29 females and many larvae, 12.xii.2015, 8 females and many larvae, 26.ii.2016, 25 females, 3.iii.2016, 59 females, 25.iii.2016, 9 females on 2.iv.2016, 56 females, 12.v.2016, 44 females and many larvae, 21.vi.2016, 5 females and 5 males, 10.x.2016, all collected by Zhaohong Wang from O. fragrans GoogleMaps .

Distribution: China (Jiangxi, Guangdong, Taiwan), Japan (Okinawa-ken).

Host plants: Osmanthus fragrans , Fraxinus griffithii [ Oleaceae ].

ANIC

Australian National Insect Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Thysanoptera

Family

Thripidae

Genus

Dendrothrips

Loc

Dendrothrips latimaculatus Nonaka & Okajima

Wang, Zhaohong, Mound, Laurence A. & Tong, Xiaoli 2019
2019
Loc

Dendrothrips latimaculatus

Nonaka, T. & Okajima, S. 1991: 107
1991
Loc

Dendrothrips mendax

Zhang, W. Q. 1982: 53
1982
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