Ecacanthothrips Bagnall

Mound, Laurence A., Dang, Li-Hong & Tree, Desley J., 2013, Genera of fungivorous Phlaeothripinae (Thysanoptera) from dead branches and leaf-litter in Australia, Zootaxa 3681 (3), pp. 201-224 : 209-210

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3681.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0473676C-4B88-4919-A5AD-F5612F08FBBE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6152525

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A5770178-C46F-FFC2-FF20-5B12BDFEFF17

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Ecacanthothrips Bagnall
status

 

Ecacanthothrips Bagnall View in CoL

This genus comprises 11 species from southeast Asia, and appears to represent a particular subgroup of Hoplandrothrips with multiple, large, sensoria on the third antennal segment ( Fig. 21 View FIGURES 19 – 24 ). These thrips live on dead branches, and E. tibialis , a highly variable species widespread in the Old World tropics, has been found in Queensland.

Diagnosis. Head as long as wide or much longer, cheeks usually with stout setae; postocular setae long; stylets long and retracted to eyes, close together medially; antennae 8-segmented, III usually with at least 6 stout sensoria, IV with 4; pronotum usually with 5 pairs of major setae; notopleural sutures complete; basantra absent; mesopraesternum usually eroded medially and divided into three; sternopleural sutures present; fore tarsi present in both sexes, fore femur usually with pair of apical tubercles in male; fore femur sometimes with median tooth at inner margin in both sexes; fore wings weakly constricted medially, with duplicated cilia; pelta triangular or bellshaped; tergites II–VII each with 2 pairs of wing-retaining setae, often with several accessory wing-retaining setae; tube shorter than head, anal setae a little shorter than tube; male sternite VIII without pore plates.

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