Symmetroraggea dirempta (Karsch, 1889) Karsch, 1889

Massa, Bruno, 2015, New genera, species and records of Phaneropterinae (Orthoptera, Phaneropteridae) from sub-Saharan Africa, ZooKeys 472, pp. 77-102 : 81

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.472.8575

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9B737D7B-BDA2-4049-B562-A68052317B02

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/295A6FD1-9DE0-03BC-0AAF-52DEF015F9D9

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Symmetroraggea dirempta (Karsch, 1889)
status

comb. n.

Taxon classification Animalia Orthoptera Phaneropteridae

Symmetroraggea dirempta (Karsch, 1889) View in CoL comb. n. Figs 14-19

Material examined.

Madagascar, Nossi bé, Hildabrandt (♂ holotype of Symmetroraggea dirempta ) (MfN); it bears a label with a former identification: laevicauda Brunner.

Redescription.

Eyes oval, with fronto-genal carinae below them (Figs 15-16); fastigium clearly narrower than first antennal segment, sulcate above. Flat pronotum, without lateral carinae, with the exception of the last part of metanotum, whose margins are sharp (Figs 15-16). Very narrow tegmina, with posterior margin nearly straight (Fig. 14), Radius of wing just forked before media, the fore base is black, as well as a longitudinal line bordering the stridulatory area and extending posteriorly with a wide marking on left tegmen (Fig. 17); coxae armed, 6 spines on ventral margin of fore femora, 6 inner spines plus 1 spur and 6 outer spines plus 1 spur on ventral margins of fore tibiae, fore tibiae dorsally rounded, not sulcate, mid femora with 7 outer spines, mid tibiae with 12 outer spines plus 1 spur and 5 inner spines plus 1 spur, hind femora with 7 outer and 4 inner spines, hind tibiae with 13 outer and 11 inner spines plus 3 spurs in each side; male tenth tergite posteriorly not protruding, with hind margin concave, male supra-genital plate protruding, with very acuminate apex, cerci stout, long, in-curved, with pointed apex, male sub-genital plate exceeding cerci, long, triangular, posteriorly narrowed, with deeply cut apex, whose margins are parallel and close between them (Figs 18-19); titillators2 are present and show a long, downcurved and hooked apex, with 2 spines basally and 3-4 small spines dorsally on each border (Figs 18-19).

Distribution.

Symmetroraggea gen. n. is known only from Madagascar, where only one species has been recorded, Symmetroraggea dirempta (Krauss, 1889), of which only the type is known.