Lithoxenus miramae, (Veltishchev, 1940)

Korsunovskaya, Olga, 2024, Drymadusini katydids (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae; Tettigoniinae): intraspecific variability-morphs or subspecies?, Zootaxa 5403 (1), pp. 42-50 : 48-49

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5403.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F6EA9A80-45CA-4A27-AFA9-8A0A813907EC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10572130

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/543187AF-6541-6E4C-CDFC-FC9BEC13FEC9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lithoxenus miramae
status

 

L. miramae (Veltishchev, 1940) View in CoL .

This species was described based on the male from Kyrgyzstan. Later, this katydid was added to the identification key of the three species known at that time (Bei-Bienko, 1951).

L. miramae is much similar to L. heptapotamicus and differs from it, according to the key of Bey-Bienko (1951), by the presence of a weak humeral notch on the lateral lobe of the pronotum ( Fig. 2K View FIGURE 2 ) and a large number of spines on the hind tibiae (22–26). However, morphological analysis of L. heptapotamicus topotypes (Childebaev et al., 2013) has shown that both the presence of a humeral notch and the number of spines on the hind tibiae are not reliable characters for differentiating L. heptapotamicus and L. miramae . In the population of L. heptapotamicus (topotypes), studied by Childebaev with co-authors, some individuals had a greater number of hind tibia spines (18– 26 in males, mean 21) and, judging by the authors’ photograph, pronotum had a weak humeral notch (Childebaev et al., 2013: Table 1 View TABLE 1 and Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). Male cerci of two species (holotype specimens) are also very similar ( Fig. 2C, M View FIGURE 2 ).

Thus, the characters that were used to separate L. heptapotamicus and L. miramae have proven unreliable. A comparison of the male genitalia of the type specimens of the two species showed that in L. heptapotamicus the basal part is more massive than the distal part ( Fig. 2G View FIGURE 2 ). On this basis, we identified three males from Uzbekistan as L. miramae . Their titillators, like those of the type specimen ( Fig. 2O View FIGURE 2 ), had similar thicknesses in the basal and distal parts ( Fig.2P View FIGURE 2 ). The number of spines on the hind tibia (19–22, 1 male) and lifetime coloration turned out to be similar to those of topotypes of L. heptapotamicus (Childebaev et al., 2013) . It is possible that additional materials will make it possible to lower the rank of L. miramae to the subspecies of L. heptapotamicus .

Below we provide a description of males from Uzbekistan ( Fig.2J, N, P View FIGURE 2 ).

Descriptive notes. Body coloration ( Fig. 2J View FIGURE 2 ) in living insects light brown with small darker dots, reminiscent of marble pattern, the upper side of abdomen with a lighter wide stripe, with paired dark spots in the center. Posterior margin of the abdominal tergites with a stripe of small dark spots. In dry specimens the coloration becomes more uniform, but the stripe spots along the posterior margin of the abdominal tergites remains. Fastigium twice as wide as the first antennal segment. Lateral lobes of pronotum with weakly defined humeral notch as in Fig. 2K View FIGURE 2 . Tegmina dark brown, almost black, their apical part with numerous transverse veins, and partly the longitudinal veins are light. The stridulatory file as in holotype ( Fig. 2L View FIGURE 2 ) hidden under pronotum. Apices of tegmina nearly reach middle of the second abdominal tergite. The last abdominal tergite black apart from light central part, divided by a deep depression into two triangular lobes. IX tergite darkened at the edges ( Fig. 2N View FIGURE 2 ). Hind tibiae with 19–22 spines. The cerci L-shaped, almost cylindrical before bending inward ( Fig. 2N View FIGURE 2 ). Subgenital plate with a shallow rounded triangular notch. Titillators ( Fig. 2P View FIGURE 2 ) have basal and distal parts of approximately equal width. In the holotype titillator the distal part is slightly narrower than the basal part. In the narrowest section (up to the apical part with several small denticles) it is approximately 2 times narrower than the middle of the basal part.

Material examined

1 ♂ (holotype). Kyrgyzian Alatau, Aleksandrovsky ridge, gorge Teres-Bulak, 30.8.193 2 (Veltishchev), stone scattering, under large stones, 1500 a.s.l.; 3 ♂. Uzbekistan: 100 km E Tashkent, Chimgan ridge, 22.VIII.2005, N. Zinenko leg.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

Family

Tettigoniidae

Genus

Lithoxenus

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