Euryaplothrips Ramakrishna & Margabandhu, 1931
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5428.1.8 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4B16A8D9-3A12-4AE3-AFB9-9CD42BD908BA |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10845346 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B65D8799-691A-C076-FF7A-FD57FD0A0A89 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Euryaplothrips Ramakrishna & Margabandhu |
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Euryaplothrips Ramakrishna & Margabandhu View in CoL
( Figs 13–15 View FIGURES 8–16 )
Euryaplothrips Ramakrishna & Margabandhu, 1931: 1037 View in CoL .
Type species Euryaplothrips crassus Ramakrishna & Margabandhu View in CoL , by monotypy.
The single species placed in this genus was described from Coimbatore in southern India, taken in the flowering heads of a species of Amaranthus View in CoL . The original authors distinguished this genus from Haplothrips (Trybomiella) View in CoL by the head being broader than long, a condition that is emphasised by the older slide-mounted specimens being contracted and slightly crushed ( Fig. 13 View FIGURES 8–16 ). Subsequently, Priesner (1965) further distinguished the genus because the outer apex of the fore femora is “somewhat reflexed and carinate”. Neither of these character states provides a robust generic distinction. The head of the holotype of Haplothrips gomphrenae Mound & Minaei (2007) View in CoL from northern Australia is no longer than wide, although in many of the paratypes the head is clearly longer than wide. The fore femoral apex in this species is also thickened, protruding slightly on the external margin, and the host plant is also a member of the Amaranthaceae View in CoL . There are specimens of Euryaplothrips crassus View in CoL in the Senckenberg Museum from Yemen, Ethiopia and the Cape Verde islands, and in the Natural History Museum, London, there are specimens of this species from plants of Aerva View in CoL ( Amaranthaceae View in CoL ) in India (Coimbatore & Madras), Pakistan (near Peshawar), Sudan (Wad Medani) and Egypt (Kom Ombo). Most of the available specimens are dark and uncleared, but in one female from Aerva View in CoL at Madras the basantra are visible ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 8–16 ). Kaomud Tyagi of Kolkata, India kindly confirmed the presence of the following character states on more recent specimens that are available to her: prosternal basantra present; metathoracic sternopleural sutures absent. These two conditions are typical of members of the genus Haplothrips View in CoL . Since no other character states have been found to distinguish this genus, Euryaplothrips View in CoL is here considered a new synonym of the genus Haplothrips Amyot & Serville. View in CoL The species Haplothrips crassus (Ramakrishna & Margabandhu) View in CoL comb.n. is thus interpreted as a rather large but short-headed species of the Haplothrips (Trybomiella) View in CoL species group.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Phlaeothripinae |
Euryaplothrips Ramakrishna & Margabandhu
Mound, Laurence A. 2024 |
Euryaplothrips
Ramakrishna, T. V. & Margabandhu, V. 1931: 1037 |