Pygothrips rugicauda Hood

Mound, Laurence A. & Tree, Desley J., 2021, Tubuliferous Thysanoptera inAustralia with an enlarged tenth abdominal segment (Phlaeothripidae, Idolothripinae), including six new species, Zootaxa 4951 (1), pp. 167-181 : 176-178

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4951.1.9

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C69BBA9F-961B-4369-8FB1-1EBCC1EB130A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4681653

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03892716-FF91-6D15-86CF-FB1EAD7D96E3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Pygothrips rugicauda Hood
status

 

Pygothrips rugicauda Hood View in CoL

( Figs 9, 10, 12 View FIGURES 1‒13 , 22 View FIGURES 14‒22 )

Pygothrips rugicauda Hood, 1915: 50 View in CoL

For many years this remarkable species remained known only from the wingless female holotype that was collected in northern Queensland by A.A. Girault, 17.viii.1912. However, in recent years specimens have been taken at various sites between southern Queensland and southern New South Wales as well as in South Australia, and these are here all provisionally identified as the same species. The shape of the tube was illustrated by Hood, such that the ventral surface is almost flat but the upper surface swollen in the basal third and from there slopes down to the anus ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 1‒13 ). In dorsal view the lateral margins are strongly curved from the broad base to the narrowly constricted anal ring. However, there is considerable variation between the available individuals in the form of the tube, even within the same sample. Most individuals of both sexes have the tube margins strongly convex ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 1‒13 ), but a few have the tube slightly more slender ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 1‒13 ). Unfortunately, there are problems in slide-mounting these thrips, such that the swollen tube is commonly crushed or collapsed, with no possibility of seriously assessing the variation within and between samples. The series taken near Canberra was beaten from dead Eucalyptus View in CoL branches that had extensive Scolytid beetle galleries, and among these specimens the pelta is sometimes so weakly sclerotised that it is almost absent. Apterous individuals have the mesopresternum reduced to a small median sclerite, but macropterae have the mesopresternum transverse and partly fused to the anterior margin of the mesoeusternum. One unidentified large Pygothrips View in CoL female from Canberra, taken from a branch together with the more typical rugicauda View in CoL females, has the tube with a series of very stout setae, and the tergite IX major setae long, fine and considerably longer than the tube. In addition to the specimens listed below, the following three specimens (in QDPC) have been studied in which the tube is robust but not swollen, and these seem likely to represent undescribed species: Canberra, one apterous fe- male, 26.ii.2011; Tasmania, Binnalong Bay, two males, 10.xii.2012. Two females listed below from Western Australia near Perth are similar to rugicauda View in CoL , but the macroptera has the tube more elongate and the pelta well-developed, broadly triangular and similar to that of P. shavianus View in CoL ; again, these possibly represent an undescribed species.Among the specimens listed below, the head, antennae, and pronotum are essentially identical, but the tube varies slightly in shape within and between samples. Without more extensive field data it is not possible to decide how many of the available specimens represent a single variable species and how many further species exist.

Specimens studied. Australian Capital Territory, from Eucalyptus dead branches: Black Mt. , 2 female macropterae, 1 female, 1 male apterae, 6.iii.2011 ; 3 female apterae, ii.2011; 1 male aptera, 12.iv.2014; 6 female apterae, 1 female macroptera, 19.iv.2011. ACT, Oakey Hill , 1 female, 2 male apterae, iii–iv.2011 . New South Wales, Holbrooke , 1 female, 1 male apterae from Eucalyptus mistletoe, ix.2007 . South Australia, Bridgewater , 1 female aptera from gall on Eucalyptus , 18.vii.1999 . Queensland: D’Aguilar National Park, Mt Glorious , 1 male aptera from dead Eucalyptus , 25.ii.2016 ; Kuranda , 1 male aptera from dead twigs, 2.xi.2008 . Western Australia, Albany 40km north, 1 female macroptera, 1 female aptera, by insecticide fogging of Eucalyptus , v.2001 (in ANIC).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Thysanoptera

Family

Phlaeothripidae

Genus

Pygothrips

Loc

Pygothrips rugicauda Hood

Mound, Laurence A. & Tree, Desley J. 2021
2021
Loc

Pygothrips rugicauda

Hood, J. D. 1915: 50
1915
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