• Home
  • Agriculture
  • Fishing and aquaculture
  • Forests
  • Minerals and petroleum
  • About us and our services
A-Z INDEX | SEARCH | CONTACT US
New South Wales Department of Primary Industries subsite home
Home »  Agriculture  »  Horticulture  »  Vegetables  »  Diseases, pests and disorders  » 

Vegetables

Onion thrips in onion - identification and monitoring

Agriculture Primefact
Primefact Number: 228    Edition: First edition    Released/reviewed: 01 Jun 2006

Onion thrips, Thrips tabaci Lindeman (Thysanoptera: Thripidae), is the most important insect pest of onion in Australia. It is a tiny, slender, free-moving insect that is often found in large numbers in onion. Both adults and nymphs feed by piercing and rasping the leaf surface and drinking the liquid. When feeding areas are large, the plant's ability to photosynthesise and maintain water balance is greatly reduced, resulting in yield loss or reduced bulb size. Onion thrips may also enter harvested bulbs and breed there, thus reducing marketability of bulbs.

The contents of this illustrated Primefact include the following:

  • What is onion thrips?
  • Damage caused by onion thrips
  • Identification
  • Where are onion thrips found?
  • Monitoring
  • Further reading
Download
PDF icon Onion thrips in onion - identification and monitoring (Full version)
 137.1 kb
Downloads require Adobe Acrobat Reader
  • Commodity growing guides
  • Diseases, pests and disorders
  • Soil management
  • Industry, economics and trade
  • From the bookshop
  • NSW DPI services
Privacy | Legal | Report a problem
© State of New South Wales, 2005 | ServiceNSW