Order Thysanoptera

• Adults 1-2mm, but some tropical species may be 10mm.
• Adults vary in colour from yellow-brown to black.
• They are characterised by their slender bodies and frilly wings.
• Eggs are laid singly by the female who inserts them into slits cut in a flower or leaf. The female does not need to mate to produce viable eggs. All males are the product of unfertilised eggs.
• The emerging nymph resembles the adult but is smaller and paler in colour.
• The lifecycle is completed within two to five weeks depending on species and environmental conditions.
• Thrips feed inside developing flower buds and in newly expanding
leaves of plants. Damage is not seen until the deformed flowers / leaves
expand.
• As they remove sap from the plant, the leaf tissue dries out giving
the leaves a silvery flecked appearance.
• Damage to flowers occurs by white spots being formed. A red-brown liquid can also speckle the flowers and/or the underside of the leaves.