Leptothrips oribates Hood, 1939

Mound, Laurence & O’Donnell, Cheryle, 2017, Predation, phytophagy and character state confusion among North American species of the genus Leptothrips (Thysanoptera: Phlaeothripinae), Zootaxa 4294 (3), pp. 301-315 : 312

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4294.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:00F6974B-2074-4BA4-99A6-B80937D16865

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6040356

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2620F071-FFA8-AC10-FF0A-F9C7FD3A43A2

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Leptothrips oribates Hood
status

 

Leptothrips oribates Hood View in CoL

Leptothrips oribates Hood, 1939: 205 View in CoL .

Leptothrips oregonensis Hood, 1939:213 View in CoL ; Synonymised by O’Neill, 1972: 272. Leptothrips brevicapitis Johansen, 1987: 52 View in CoL . Syn. n.

Described from Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico, with one synonym from Oregon, specimens of this species have also been seen from Nevada and California . It is closely associated with species of Pinus View in CoL , and has been taken several times from immature pine cones. It is distinguished from pini View in CoL , with which it shares this host association, by the presence on antennal segment IV of four sense cones. Both species lack pronotal sculpture and have the fore wings pale at the base, but the available distribution records suggest that they are adapted to rather different ecological conditions, with pini View in CoL mainly from the Florida area , but oribates View in CoL from the Western states . Johansen described brevicapitis View in CoL from a few specimens associated with Pinus View in CoL from California and Arizona . He stated that these specimens have the eyes prolonged ventrally, in contrast to those of oribates View in CoL . However, the difference between the dorsal and ventral surfaces in the holotype (see Fig. 73 in Johansen, 1987) is trivial, and involves a difference of no more than the diameter of a single ommatidium. The extent to which the eyes are longer ventrally than dorsally in the available specimens of oribates View in CoL is here interpreted as being associated with the orientation of the head in slide-mounted specimens (see discussion above). More than 40 specimens of oribates View in CoL have been studied from various sites in California (in ERMR); two of these were noted to have only three sense cones on segment IV of one antenna (but not on both), and in all of them segment IV lacked a small ancillary sense cone (= sensillum coeloconicum) on the external surface.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Thysanoptera

Family

Phlaeothripidae

Genus

Leptothrips

Loc

Leptothrips oribates Hood

Mound, Laurence & O’Donnell, Cheryle 2017
2017
Loc

Leptothrips oribates

Hood 1939: 205
1939
Loc

Leptothrips oregonensis

Johansen 1987: 52
O'Neill 1972: 272
Hood 1939: 213
1939
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