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Thrips konoi

Recognition data

Distinguishing features

Both sexes fully winged. Abdomen varying from light yellowish brown to uniformly brown; head and thorax brown, legs brownish yellow; antennal segment III yellow in basal third; forewing pale to weakly shaded. Head wider than long; two pairs of ocellar setae, pair III arising just outside anterior margins of ocellar triangle; postocular setae pair I about as long as ocellar setae pair III, but pair II smaller than pair III. Antennae 7-segmented; III � IV with short forked sensorium; segment VII short. Pronotum with two pairs of long posteroangular setae; three pairs of posteromarginal setae. Metanotum with closely spaced longitudinal lines medially; median setae arising behind anterior margin; campaniform sensilla present. Forewing first vein with three setae on distal half; second vein with about 12 setae; clavus with five marginal setae. Abdominal tergite II with three lateral marginal setae; tergites V � VIII with ctenidia present laterally, on VIII posteromesad to spiracles; tergite VIII posteromarginal comb with long slender microtrichia; pleurotergites with no discal setae, lines of sculpture bearing broadly based teeth. Sternite II with two pairs of marginal setae, III � VII with three pairs, no sternal discal setae. Male smaller; sternites III � VII with transverse or oval glandular area.

Related and similar species

In contrast to T. nigropilosus , tergite IX of T. konoi has two pairs of campaniform sensilla instead of one, and the metanotum is more closely striate. The genus Thrips is the second largest genus in the Thysanoptera, and currently includes, worldwide, about 280 species. All members of the genus lack ocellar setae I on the head, and they all have ctenidia on tergite VIII posteromesad to the spiracles. Other characters, such as number of antennal segments, number of setae on the forewing veins, and number of discal setae on the sternites are variable between species (Palmer, 1992; Nakahara, 1994; Mound & Masumoto, 2005).

Taxonomic data

Current valid name

Thrips konoi Nakahara

Original name and synonyms

Thrips konoi Nakahara, 1994: 77

Family placement

Thripidae, Thripinae

Biological data

Life history

Probably flower-living

Host plants

Adults collected in considerable numbers from Carex (Cyperaceae).

Tospoviruses vectored

None

Crop damage

None

Distribution data

Area of origin

Western USA

Distribution

California, Colorado.