Difference between revisions of "Rhopalothripoides froggatti"
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Bagnall RS (1916) ''Brief descriptions of new Thysanoptera VIII''. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (8)17 : 397–412. | Bagnall RS (1916) ''Brief descriptions of new Thysanoptera VIII''. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (8)17 : 397–412. | ||
== Type information == | == Type information == | ||
− | Holotype male (''R. froggatti | + | Holotype male (''R. froggatti''), The Natural History Museum, London. |
Holotype female (''R. brunneus''), The Natural History Museum, London. | Holotype female (''R. brunneus''), The Natural History Museum, London. |
Revision as of 23:33, 21 August 2012
Nomenclatural details
Froggattothrips acaciae Bagnall, 1929: 175
Froggattothrips inconsequens Bagnall, 1929: 176
Rhopalothripoides kellyanus Bagnall, 1929: 174
Rhopalothripoides froggatti Bagnall, 1916
Rhopalothrips brunneus Bagnall, 1916: 412
Rhopalothrips froggatti Bagnall, 1916: 411
Biology and Distribution
Described from New South Wales(R. froggatti, F, acaciae, F. inconsequens) and Victoria (R. brunneus, R. kellyanus), recorded from Victoria, Australian Capital Territory and Queensland.
References
Crespi BJ, Morris DC & Mound LA (2004) Evolution of ecological and behavioural diversity: Australian Acacia thrips as model organisms. Australian Biological Resources Study & Australian National Insect Collection, CSIRO, Canberra, Australia, pp. 1–328.
Bagnall RS (1929) On a group of minute Australian Thysanoptera (Tubulifera) and their association with the so-called leaf-glands of Acacia. Transactions of the entomological Society of London 77 : 171–176.
Bagnall RS (1916) Brief descriptions of new Thysanoptera VIII. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (8)17 : 397–412.
Type information
Holotype male (R. froggatti), The Natural History Museum, London.
Holotype female (R. brunneus), The Natural History Museum, London.
Holotype female (R. kellyanus), The Natural History Museum, London.
Holotype female (F. acaciae), The Natural History Museum, London.
Holotype female (F. inconsequens), The Natural History Museum, London.