Difference between revisions of "Teuchothrips simplicipennis"

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(Created page with "== Nomenclatural details == == Biology and Distribution == == References == == Type information ==")
 
 
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== Nomenclatural details ==
 
== Nomenclatural details ==
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''Teuchothrips simplicipennis'' Hood, 1919: 87.
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''Mesothrips insolens'' Bagnall, 1924: 638.
 
== Biology and Distribution ==
 
== Biology and Distribution ==
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Described from Brooklyn, New South Wales, Australia (''T. simplicipennis'') and Victoria on ''Leptospermum myrsinoides'' (''M. insolens'').
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
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Hood JD (1919) Two new genera and thirteen new species of Australian Thysanoptera. ''Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington'' 32: 75–92.
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Mound LA (2008) Identification and host associations of some Thysanoptera Phlaeothripinae described from Australia pre-1930. ''Zootaxa'' 1714: 41–60.
 
== Type information ==
 
== Type information ==
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Holotype female (''T. simplicipennis''), National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC; paratype female in Senckenberg Museum, Frankfurt.
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Syntype (''M. insolens''), The Natural History Museum, London.
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[[category: Teuchothrips species]][[category: Phlaeothripinae species]][[category:Thysanoptera species extant]]

Latest revision as of 00:14, 21 November 2022

Nomenclatural details

Teuchothrips simplicipennis Hood, 1919: 87.

Mesothrips insolens Bagnall, 1924: 638.

Biology and Distribution

Described from Brooklyn, New South Wales, Australia (T. simplicipennis) and Victoria on Leptospermum myrsinoides (M. insolens).

References

Hood JD (1919) Two new genera and thirteen new species of Australian Thysanoptera. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 32: 75–92.

Mound LA (2008) Identification and host associations of some Thysanoptera Phlaeothripinae described from Australia pre-1930. Zootaxa 1714: 41–60.

Type information

Holotype female (T. simplicipennis), National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC; paratype female in Senckenberg Museum, Frankfurt.

Syntype (M. insolens), The Natural History Museum, London.