Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Thrips > Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis, confirmed.
Posted by Maherjos on 11-07-2011 19:27
#1
Photograph taken on July 10, 2011, in terrace housing in urban areas in Motril, Granada, Spain.
Immediate area of the Mediterranean coast.
Approximate size, no antennae or tails < 1,5 mm
Appreciate your cooperation for identification.
Greetings
Edited by Maherjos on 12-07-2011 22:39
Posted by Paul Beuk on 11-07-2011 19:34
#2
Thrips, probably a juvenile as the wings do not appear to be fully developed.
Posted by Maherjos on 11-07-2011 20:37
#3
Paul Beuk wrote:
Thrips, probably a juvenile as the wings do not appear to be fully developed.
My thanks to Paul for the information provided.
Best Regards
Posted by Tony Irwin on 11-07-2011 21:24
#4
Adult Greenhouse Thrips -
Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis
Posted by Maherjos on 12-07-2011 01:16
#5
Tony Irwin wrote:
Adult Greenhouse Thrips - Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis
Hi Tony Irwin
This one is photographed a few days ago (12/07/2011), in the same environment on my terrace and I think should be the adult specimen.
Confirm it Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis ?.
Very grateful for your cooperation and help.
Best Regards
Posted by Tony Irwin on 12-07-2011 22:03
#7
Your first picture is an adult
Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis. (Paul was incorrect to suggest it was a juvenille. Juvenille thrips do not have wings. Thrips "pupae" - the pre-adult nymphs - do have long wing buds, but these are held out to the side of the abdomen, not laid along the mid-line.)
Your second picture is an adult
Liothrips oleae or a related species.
Note: These are quite distinctive species - most thrips are not so readily identified! ;)
Edited by Tony Irwin on 12-07-2011 22:06
Posted by Maherjos on 12-07-2011 22:37
#8
Tony Irwin wrote:
Your first picture is an adult Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis. (Paul was incorrect to suggest it was a juvenille. Juvenille thrips do not have wings. Thrips "pupae" - the pre-adult nymphs - do have long wing buds, but these are held out to the side of the abdomen, not laid along the mid-line.)
Your second picture is an adult Liothrips oleae or a related species.
Note: These are quite distinctive species - most thrips are not so readily identified! ;)
I express again my thanks for your clarification, let me know that unambiguously identify the insect.
Best Regards