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| Entomology:  THYSANOPTERA 1 Kingdom:  Animalia, Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum: Hexapoda: Class: Insecta: Order: Thysanoptera (Contact)    
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     General Summary of
  Thysanoptera             The Thysanoptera -- <Adults>
  & <Juveniles> -- are tiny insects, 0.5 to
  12 millimeters, with asymmetrical piercing rasping-sucking mouthparts and a
  short labial proboscis.  Their
  prothorax is large and free.  The
  tarsus has two or three joints with a terminal extendable vesicle.  Both winged and wingless forms occur.  When present there are two pairs of
  similar wings, provided with a fringe of prominent long hairs, which appear
  as feathers, and few veins if at all are present.               Metamorphosis is more complex than
  most insects and it includes an incipient pupal instar.  Instar 1 and 2 are simple with no wing
  pads.  Instar 3 has wing pads.  The 4th instar is quiescent and changing
  enclosed in a cocoon.   .              Parthenogenesis is of common. In
  the pea thrips, Kakothrips robustus, the eggs are inserted in the stamen
  sheath of the flower and the nymphs emerging feed on the young fruit,
  inhibiting its growth. Later they feed on the soft tissues of pea pods,
  causing scar-like markings. The nymphs leave the plant and bury themselves
  deeply in the ground, where they remain until the following spring, when they
  pupate. Common thrips in Europe are Taeniothrips inconsequens of pears
  and Anaphothrips striatus of grasses and cereals (Borradaile
  & Potts, 1958).               Their direct feeding activity gives
  plant leaves a silvery appearance. 
  They are able to transmit the Spotted-wilt virus to
  tomatoes.  The citrus thrips and
  gladiola thrips are very destructive, the latter damaging the corms in
  storage.  The bean thrips feed on the leaves
  of cotton and beans.  They are also
  very important pests of pears where they attack the flower buds and prevent
  their development.               The onion thrips attacks a wide
  range of plants.  It causes a
  distortion to the foliage of onion and is especially serious on onion seed
  crops.  It fees mostly on the leaf
  sheath, but will also attack the blossoms. 
  The males are wingless, but females have wings and they reproduce
  parthenogenetically.  The gestation
  period is only 20 days.   ---------------------------------- Thysanoptera --Biological Control Projects (1%
  of total projects)             Cuban Laurel Thrips, Gynaikothrips ficorum Marchal <ch-36.htm>   -------------------------------------------   Details
  of Insect Taxonomic Groups             Examples of beneficial species
  occur in almost every insect order, and considerable information on
  morphology and habits has been assembled. 
  Therefore, the principal groups of insect parasitoids and predators
  provide details that refer to the entire class Insecta.  These details are available at <taxnames.htm>.   ============== |