The Western Flower Thrips
What are the western flower thrips, Frankliniella occidentalis?
The western flower thrips, Frankliniella occidentalis are small slender bodied insects with brownish colored body and yellowish hair-fringed wings. The babies of the western flower thrips also called as nymphs. These nymphs look like their parents but wingless. Both adults and nymphs of thrips use their rasping and sucking types of mouth parts for puncturing tissues and sucking the cell sap (juice) from the punctured tissues.
Facts (show all)
- List of the most economically devastating species of The Western Flower Thrips
- Most common host plants of the Western Flower Thrips
- Biology of Thrips
- What type of damage is caused by thrips?
- Which Viruses are transmitted by thrips?
- Biological control of thrips
- Predatory beneficial insects for thrip control
- Parasitic beneficial wasps
- Parasitic beneficial entomopathogenic nematodes for the control of thrips
- Research Papers