Difference between revisions of "Ceratothripoides brunneus"
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''Physothrips ventralis'' Hood, 1918: 116. Synonym for ''C. brunneus''. | ''Physothrips ventralis'' Hood, 1918: 116. Synonym for ''C. brunneus''. | ||
== Biology and Distribution == | == Biology and Distribution == | ||
− | Described from Aburi, Ghana from cola shoots and leaves (''C. brunneus'') and ''Hibiscus sinensis'' (''P. marshalli'') and Cameroon from ''Aconitum napellus'' (''P. ventralis''). | + | Described from Aburi, Ghana from cola shoots and leaves (''C. brunneus'') and ''Hibiscus sinensis'' (''P. marshalli'') and Cameroon from ''Aconitum napellus'' (''P. ventralis''). Since year 2000 this species has been seen from Caribbean countries also Ecuador as well as Malaysia. |
== References == | == References == | ||
Bagnall RS (1918) On the rubber thrips (Physothrips funtumiae Bagn.) and its allies. ''Bulletin of entomological Research'' 9: 65–70. | Bagnall RS (1918) On the rubber thrips (Physothrips funtumiae Bagn.) and its allies. ''Bulletin of entomological Research'' 9: 65–70. |
Latest revision as of 22:46, 17 October 2023
Nomenclatural details
Ceratothripoides brunneus Bagnall, 1918: 201.
Physothrips marshalli Bagnall, 1918: 66.
Physothrips ventralis Hood, 1918: 116. Synonym for C. brunneus.
Biology and Distribution
Described from Aburi, Ghana from cola shoots and leaves (C. brunneus) and Hibiscus sinensis (P. marshalli) and Cameroon from Aconitum napellus (P. ventralis). Since year 2000 this species has been seen from Caribbean countries also Ecuador as well as Malaysia.
References
Bagnall RS (1918) On the rubber thrips (Physothrips funtumiae Bagn.) and its allies. Bulletin of entomological Research 9: 65–70.
Bagnall RS (1918) Brief descriptions of new Thysanoptera IX. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (9)1: 201–221.
Mound LA & Nickle DA (2009) The Old-World genus Ceratothripoides (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) with a new genus for related New-World species. Zootaxa 2230: 57–63.
Type information
Holotype female (C. brunneus), The Natural History Museum, London.
Lectotype female (P. ventralis), National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC.
Syntypes, (P. marshalli), The Natural History Museum, London.