Heliothrips Haemorrhoidalis
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Heliothrips Haemorrhoidalis
''Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis'' is a species of thrips in the family Thripidae. It is most commonly known as the greenhouse thrips, the glasshouse thrip or black tea thrips. This species of thrips was first described in 1833 by Bouché in Berlin, Germany. ''H. haemorrhoidalis'' also has many synonyms depending on where they were described from such as: ''H. adonidum'' Haliday, ''H. semiaureus'' Girault, ''H. abdominalis'' Reuter, ''H. angustior'' Priesner, ''H. ceylonicus'' Schultz, ''Dinurothrips rufiventris'' Girault. In New Zealand, ''H. haemorrhoidalis'' is one of the four species belonging to the subfamily Panchaetothripinae. Description Physical appearance Like other species in the family, Thripidae, they have the typical flattened bodies with wings that are narrow and pointed, and their ovipositors resembles a saw. The Head ''H. haemorrhoidalis'' have pale yellow 8-segmented antennae where the last segment narrows to look needle-like. ''H. haemorrhoidalis'' have wh ...
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Thrips
Thrips ( order Thysanoptera) are minute (mostly long or less), slender insects with fringed wings and unique asymmetrical mouthparts. Different thrips species feed mostly on plants by puncturing and sucking up the contents, although a few are predators. Entomologists have described approximately 6,000 species. They fly only weakly and their feathery wings are unsuitable for conventional flight; instead, thrips exploit an unusual mechanism, clap and fling, to create lift using an unsteady circulation pattern with transient vortices near the wings. Many thrips species are pests of commercially important crops. A few species serve as vectors for over 20 viruses that cause plant disease, especially the Tospoviruses. Some species of thrips are beneficial as pollinators or as predators of other insects or mites. In the right conditions, such as in greenhouses, many species can exponentially increase in population size and form large swarms because of a lack of natural predators ...
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Fuchsia
''Fuchsia'' () is a genus of flowering plants that consists mostly of shrubs or small trees. The first to be scientifically described, '' Fuchsia triphylla'', was discovered on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola (Haiti and the Dominican Republic) about 1696–1697 by the French Minim monk and botanist, Charles Plumier, during his third expedition to the Greater Antilles. He named the new genus after German botanist Leonhart Fuchs (1501–1566). Taxonomy The fuchsias are most closely related to the northern hemisphere genus '' Circaea'', the two lineages having diverged around 41 million years ago. Description Almost 110 species of ''Fuchsia'' are recognized; the vast majority are native to South America, but a few occur north through Central America to Mexico, and also several from New Zealand to Tahiti. One species, '' F. magellanica'', extends as far as the southern tip of South America, occurring on Tierra del Fuego in the cool temperate zone, but the majority are tro ...
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Spilomena Nozela
''Spilomena'' is a genus of aphid wasps in the family Pemphredonidae. The 86 species are found worldwide being represented in the Palearctic (highest number of species), Nearctic, Afrotropical, Neotropical, Australasian, and Indomalayan realms. Species These 88 species belong to the genus ''Spilomena'': * '' Spilomena acutitemporis'' Antropov, 1992 * '' Spilomena alboclypeata'' Bradley, 1906 * '' Spilomena alini'' Antropov, 1991 * '' Spilomena ampliceps'' Krombein, 1952 * '' Spilomena arania'' Leclercq, 1961 * '' Spilomena argentina'' Antropov, 1992 * '' Spilomena atrata'' Antropov, 1993 * '' Spilomena ausiana'' Leclercq, 1959 * '' Spilomena australis'' R. Turner, 1910 * '' Spilomena bakeri'' R. Bohart in Bohart and N. Smith, 1995 * '' Spilomena barberi'' Krombein, 1962 * '' Spilomena beata'' Blüthgen, 1953 (Europe) * '' Spilomena bicuspidata'' Antropov, 1993 * '' Spilomena bimaculata'' (Rayment, 1930) * '' Spilomena brasiliensis'' Antropov, 1991 * '' Spilomena canariensis'' ...
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