Difference between revisions of "Ethirothrips acanthus"
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== Type information == | == Type information == | ||
Holotype female in US National Museum of Natural History, Washington; holotype females of ''sismondini'' and ''nox'' in the Queensland Museum, Brisbane; holotype female of ''differens'' in Senckenberg Museum, Frankfurt. | Holotype female in US National Museum of Natural History, Washington; holotype females of ''sismondini'' and ''nox'' in the Queensland Museum, Brisbane; holotype female of ''differens'' in Senckenberg Museum, Frankfurt. | ||
+ | [[category:Ethirothrips species]][[category:Idolothripinae species]] |
Revision as of 05:30, 7 November 2012
Nomenclatural details
Cryptothrips acanthus Hood, 1919: 88.
Cryptothrips sjostedti Karny, 1926: 42. Synonymised by Mound, 1974: 93.
Adiaphorothrips sismondini Girault, 1926: 1. Synonymised by Mound, 1974: 93.
Adiaphorothrips nox Girault, 1928: 2. Synonymised by Mound, 1974: 93.
Adiaphorothrips differens Priesner, 1928: 656. Synonymised by Mound, 1974: 93.
Biology and Distribution
From eastern Australia.
References
Hood JD (1919) Two new genera and thirteen new species of Australian Thysanoptera. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 32: 75–92.
Karny H (1920) Nova Australska Thysanoptera, jez nashbiral Mjöberg. Casopis Ceskoslovenské spolecnosti entomologiscké 17: 35–44.
Girault AA (1926) New pests from Australia V. Published privately, Brisbane. 2 pp.
Girault AA (1928) A prodigeous discourse on wild animals. Published privately, Brisbane. pp. 1–3.
Priesner H (1928) Über australische Thysanopteren. Sitzungsberichte der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften 137: 643–659.
Mound LA (1974) Spore-feeding Thrips (Phlaeothripidae) from Leaf Litter and Dead Wood in Australia. Australian Journal of Zoology 27: 1–106.
Mound LA & Palmer JM (1983) The generic and tribal classification of spore-feeding Thysanoptera (Phlaeothripidae: Idolothripinae). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Entomology 46: 1-174. See also: [1]
Type information
Holotype female in US National Museum of Natural History, Washington; holotype females of sismondini and nox in the Queensland Museum, Brisbane; holotype female of differens in Senckenberg Museum, Frankfurt.