Angaracris barabensis ( Pallas, 1773 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4244.3.9 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5DFF3584-D62C-4022-B535-CFE56B26ED09 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6017614 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9C4087CA-AD2C-FFAA-FF3D-43BC9143F9F7 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Angaracris barabensis ( Pallas, 1773 ) |
status |
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Angaracris barabensis ( Pallas, 1773)
Figs 1–16 View FIGURES 1 – 4 View FIGURES 5 – 10 View FIGURES 11 – 15 View FIGURE 16 , 24–26 View FIGURES 17 – 32
Gryllus (Locusta) barabensis Pallas, 1773: 728 (syntypes—males and females, Russia: West Siberia, Barabinskaya steppe [steppes on right side of Irtysh River from Omsk to Altai]; lost).
Oedipoda barabensis: Fischer von Waldheim, 1846: 296 , Pl. 14, fig. 2.
Bryodema barabensis: Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1882: 167 ; Saussure, 1884: 181; Zubowsky, 1898: 98; Zubowsky, 1900: 17; Bolívar, 1901: 226, 233; Karny, 1908: 48; Kirby, 1910: 262; Bey-Bienko, 1925: 53; Bey-Bienko, 1929: 103.
Bryodema barabense: Jacobson, 1905: 266 ; Miram, 1907: 8; Pylnov, 1918: 138;
Angaracris barabensis: Bey-Bienko, 1930a: 119 , Pl. 18, fig. 6, Pl. 19, fig. 3; Bey-Bienko, 1930b: 498; Miram, 1933: 38; Berezhkov, 1937: 47, 69; Zimin, 1938: 73, Pl. 9, figs. 47, 49; Tarbinsky, 1948: 125; Bey-Bienko & Mistshenko, 1951: 604, figs. 1234, 1236; Berezhkov, 1951: 21; Berezhkov, 1956: 162; Bey-Bienko, 1964: 282; Popov, 1964: 1314; Popov, 1965: 122; Čejchan & Mařan, 1966: 186; Ivanova, 1967: 134; Chogsomzhav, 1972: 183; Mistshenko, 1972: 113; Mařan & Čejchan, 1974: 16; Zheng & Hang, 1974: 429; Harz, 1975: 446; Chogsomzhav, 1977: 87; Mistshenko, 1968: 495; Li, 1981: 167; Storozhenko, 1986: 317, figs. 115(12), 114(6); Sergeev, 1986: 213; Vysotskaya & Bugrov, 1987a: 1190; Chogsomzhav, 1989: 94; Kang et al., 1989: 343; Otte, 1995: 328; Benediktov, 1998: 792, figs. 1(7, 15), 2(5), 3, 4(1), 5; Li, 1998: 72, 553; Dubatolov & Sergeev, 1999: 55; Childebaev & Storozhenko, 2001: 39; Cherniachovskij, 2002: 167, 199, fig. 8.85; Sergeev & Childebaev, 2002: 297; Korsun, 2004: 93; Childebaev et al., 2013: 2, figs. 1-4; Benediktov, 2016: 469, fig. 4.
Angaracris barbensis (!): Bi, 1986: 195. Incorrect subsequent spelling.
Angeracris (!) barabensis: Steinmann, 1965: 113 ; Steinmann, 1967: 119; Steinmann, 1968: 247. Incorrect subsequent spelling.
Oedipoda hospes Fischer von Waldheim, 1846: 295 , Pl. 24, figs. 1, 2 (syntypes—male and female, Russia: Baikal Lake; lost). Synonymized with Bryodema barabensis by Saussure (1884).
Oedipoda lugubris Fischer von Waldheim, 1846: 298 , Pl. 32, figs. 4, 5 (syntypes—male and female, Russia: Daourie [= south part of Zabaikalskyi krai]; lost). Synonymized with Bryodema barabensis by Saussure (1884).
Oedipoda rhodopa Fischer von Waldheim, 1836: 348 (syntypes—males and females, Russia: Altai Mts, Katun Ridge; lost). Synonymized with Angaracris barabensis by Benediktov (1998).
Oedipoda rhodoptera (!): Fischer von Waldheim, 1836: Pl. 4, fig. 2. Incorrect subsequent spelling.
Oedipoda rhodopa: Fischer von Waldheim, 1846: 296 , Pl. 21, fig. 4.
Bryodema barabense var. rhodopus: Jacobson, 1905: 266 ; Miram, 1907: 8.
Bryodema barabense var. rhodopa: Ikonnikov, 1911: 256 .
Byodema rhodopa: Kirby, 1910: 262 .
Angaracris rhodopa: Bey-Bienko, 1930a: 121 ; Bey-Bienko, 1930b: 498; Miram, 1933: 38; Tarbinsky, 1948: 125; Bey-Bienko & Mistshenko, 1951: 604; Berezhkov, 1956: 163; Bey-Bienko, 1964: 282; Popov, 1964: 1314; Čejchan & Mařan, 1966: 186; Ivanova, 1967: 134; Mistshenko, 1968: 495; Chogsomzhav, 1972: 183; Mistshenko, 1972: 113; Mařan & Čejchan, 1974: 17; Zheng & Hang, 1974: 429; Chogsomzhav, 1977: 87; Li, 1981: 168; Yin, 1982: 84, fig. 17 (a-d); Bi, 1986: 195; Storozhenko, 1986: 317; Sergeev, 1986: 213; Vysotskaya & Bugrov, 1987a: 1190; Chogsomzhav, 1989: 94; Kang et al., 1989: 343; Zheng & Ren, 1993: 428, 429; Otte, 1995: 328; Li, 1998: 70, 553, fig. 36 (a-f).
Angaracris barabensis rhodopa: Furukawa, 1939: 66 , 121, 152.
Angaracris rhopodus (!): Berezhkov, 1937: 47. Incorrect subsequent spelling.
Angaracris rhadopus (!): Berezhkov, 1951: 21. Incorrect subsequent spelling.
Angeracris (!) rhodopa: Steinmann, 1965: 113 . Incorrect subsequent spelling.
Bryodema barabensis var. rhodoptila Karny, 1908: 49 (syntypes—sex and number of type specimens not recorded; North-West China: Gansu province, Lantschou; depositary of types unknown). Synonymized with Angaracris rhodopa by Bey-Bienko (1930).
Bryodema barabense var. roseipennis Krauss, 1901: 237 (syntypes— 9 males, 5 females; China: Kuku-nor Ridge in Nanshan Mts. [= Qilian Mts., North-West China]; in SMNS Stuttgart). Synonymized with Bryodema barabense var. rhodopus by Jacobson (1905).
Oedipoda thunbergi Stål, 1861: 345 (holotype—female, type locality unknown, wrongly labeled “ Rio Janeiro, West Indies ”; in NHRS Stockholm). Synonymized with Bryodema barabensis by Saussure (1884).
Oedipoda thunbergi: Walker, 1870: 734 .
Angaracris nigripennis Lian & Zheng, 1984: 305 , 310, figs. 23-27 (holotype—male, China: Gansu, Sunan; in IZSNU Shaanxi). Synonymized with Angaracris barabensis by Childebaev et al. (2013).
Angaracris nigripennis: Bi, 1986: 195 ; Li, 1998: 75, 553, fig. 39 (a-f); Zeng & Han, 1998: 26; Otte, 1995: 328.
Angaracris acrohylina Bi, 1986: 195 , figs. 1-5 (holotype—male; China: Tibet, Lhasa; in IEAS Shanghai). Syn. nov.
Angaracris acrohylina: Zheng & Ren, 1994: 251 , 253; Otte, 1995: 328; Li, 1998: 77, 553, fig. 40 (a-c); Zeng & Han, 1998: 26.
Angaracris morulimarginis Huang, 1981: 78 , 83, Pl. 3, fig. 6 (holotype—male, China: Tibet, Lhasa; in IZAS Beijing). Syn. nov.
Angaracris morulimarginis: Bi, 1986: 195 ; Otte, 1995: 328; Li, 1998: 74, 553, fig. 38.
Angaracris morulipennis Zheng & Ren, 1994: 251 , 253, figs. 7, 8 (holotype—male, China: Ningxia, Zhongwei; in IZSNU Shaanxi). Syn. nov.
Angaracris neimongolensis Zeng & Han, 1998: 25 , 28, fig. 1 (holotype—male, China: Inner Mongolia, Zhenglanqi; in IZSNU Shaanxi). Syn. nov.
Angaracris nigrimarginis Zheng & Ren, 1993: 427 , 429, figs. 11, 12 (holotype—female, China: Inner Mongolia, Baorou; in IZSNU Shaanxi). Syn. nov.
Angaracris ulashanicus Li, 1981: 168 , 173, figs. 1-3 (holotype—male, China: Inner Mongolia, Ulashan; in IZAS Beijing). Syn. nov.
Angaracris ulashanicus: Lian & Zheng, 1984: 306 , 310; Li, 1998: 73, 553, fig. 37 (a-d); Otte, 1995: 328.
Angaracris ulashanica (!): Bi, 1986: 195. Incorrect subsequent spelling.
Type material. Types of species described by Pallas (1773) and Fisher von Waldheim (1836, 1846) are lost. For stability of nomenclature and according to Article 75 of the Code (ICZN, 1999) we designate the neotypes for follow taxa:
Gryllus (Locusta) barabensis Pallas, 1773 . Neotype—male , Russia: “ Severnaya , Slavgorodskiy u., Omskoy gub.” [=Altaiskiy krai, Kliuchevckoy rayon, Severka, 52o08'N, 79o17'E], 7 August 1922, coll. V. Raevsky ( ZISP); here designated ( Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1 – 4 ). GoogleMaps
Oedipoda hospes Fischer von Waldheim, 1846 . Neotype—male , Russia: Irkutskaya oblast, 15 km E Ust- Ordynsky, 52o48'N, 104o46'E, 4 August 1994, coll. P.G. Nemkov ( ZISP); here designated ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1 – 4 ). GoogleMaps
Oedipoda lugubris Fischer von Waldheim, 1846 . Neotype—male , Russia: Zabaikalskiy krai, 35 km SW Borzya, 50o24'N, 116o33'E, 20 July 1977, coll. S.Yu. Storozhenko ( ZISP); here designated ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1 – 4 ). GoogleMaps
Oedipoda rhodopa Fischer von Waldheim, 1836 . Neotype—male, Russia: Altai Republic, Onguday , 50o44'N, 86o08'E, 12 July 2016, coll. M.Yu. Proshchalykin ( ZISP); here designated ( Fig. 4 View FIGURES 1 – 4 ). GoogleMaps
Other material examined. Totally 1092 specimens. ZISP (941 specimens) including 29 males & 14 females from Kazakhstan , 254 males & 221 females from Russia , 223 males & 165 females from Mongolia, and 19 males & 16 females from China ; IBPS (154 specimens) including 92 males & 53 females from Russia and 2 males & 4 females from Mongolia .
Description. Width of vertex between eyes 1.6–1.8 times wider than the width of frontal ridge between antennae; depression of vertex shallow, without median carinula. Frontal ridge relatively broad, slightly widened near the base of antennae and distinctly depressed at least near the median ocellus. Antennae reaching the hind margin of pronotum; mid segments of antennae 2.0–2.6 times as long as wide. Metazona in male 1.9–2.3 times, in female 1.8–2.1 times longer than prozona. Metasternal interspace in male 1.9–2.0 times, in female 2.3–2.4 times as broad as long. Tegmina in rest position surpassing apex of hind femur in male on 11.0– 12.2 mm and in female on 6.0– 9.5 mm; maximal width of costal field 1.4–2.0 times wider than the width of subcostal field and almost equal to the width of medial field. Male supra-anal plate with two widely rounded ridges near the base and two almost parallel ridges in apical part ( Fig. 7 View FIGURES 5 – 10 ). Male subgenital plate conical ( Fig. 8 View FIGURES 5 – 10 ). Female basivalvular plates rugulose ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 5 – 10 ).
Coloration of body, wings and legs is extremely variable. Body brownish, greenish or blackish, usually with black and/or white spots especially on pronotum. Tegmina brown, greenish or blackish, with numerous dark spots or stripes, rarely without any marks. The color of hind wings is also extremely variable from hyaline membrane to provide by dark spots, stripes and bands as well as to the completely black or dark brown membrane ( Fig. 16 View FIGURE 16 ). The base of anal field of the hind wings yellowish, greenish or rose; anal veins blackish, yellowish, brownish or red. Hind femora pale brown or greenish, rarely almost completely black; outer side of femur with 2–3 black bands and one light pregenicular band; lower side of femur yellowish, brown or red; inner side of femur pale brown or reddish with 2–3 large black spots which sometimes fused and forming longitudinal stripe. Hind tibia yellow, light brown or reddish.
Measurements (mm). Length of body: male 22.0–31.0, female 27.0–35.0; pronotum: male 5.5–7.2, female 5.8–8.5; tegmen: male 24.0–33.0, female 23.5–32.0; hind femur: male 11.0–14.0, female 13.0–18.0; ovipositor 2.4–2.5.
Distribution. Kazakhstan (north and central part: Kostanay region, Akmola region, Pavlodar region, Kent Mountains, Karsakpay Plateau), Russia (south part of Ural and Siberia: Orenburgskaya oblast, Omskaya oblast, Novosibirskaya oblast, Kemerovskaya oblast, Altaisky krai, Altai Republic, south part of Krasnoyarskiy krai, Republic of Khakassia, Tyva Republic [= Tuva], Irkutskaya oblast, Republic of Buryatia, Zabaikalskiy krai), Mongolia (Uvs aimag, Zavkhan aimag, Gov aimag, Khovsogol aimag, Bayankhongor aimag, Bulgan aimag, Ovorkhangay aimag, Dongov aimag, Omnogov aimag, Dornogo aimag, Tov aimag, Khentiy aimag, Dorod aimag), China (Qinhai province, Gansu province, Shaanxi province, Shanxi province, Heilongjiang province, Nei Mongol Zizhiqu, Xizang Zizhiqu).
Notes. While the presence of two color forms of hind wings occurs in some species of Oedipodinae , for example in Mioscirtus wagneri (Eversmann, 1849) ( Huang et al., 2013) , but during long time the hyaline and reddish forms of Angaracris was considered as distinct species or subspecies. The presence of transitional forms, the similarity in the acoustic signals of males, absence of differences in the structure of the male genitalia, and the same localization of C-heterochromatic blocks in chromosomes show that A. rhodopa is synonym of A. barabensis ( Benediktov, 1998) .
In 1981–1998 seven new species of Angaracris was described from North and Central China, each based on a single holotype or a few (3–4) type specimens. These species were again distinguished mainly by the color and pattern of hind wings. The most different forms with hyaline, reddish and almost completely black membrane of hind wings have been synonymized recently (Childebaev et al., 2013). The investigation of variability of the hind wings color and pattern in the tribe Bryodemini is made by the second author and it was found that A. barabenis is one of the most variable species ( Benediktov, 2016). Here we considered other six Chinese species as synonyms of A. barabenis .
Angaracris barabensis is abundant in steppes and semi-deserts. It overwinters in egg stage. The egg pod is described by Zimin (1938) and Cherniachovskij (2002). Nymphs occurs from mid May to June, adults—from end June to September.
Angaracris barabensis damage the pasture vegetation ( Bey-Bienko & Mishchenko, 1951; Mistshenko, 1972), but most preferable are lichen Parmelia vagans Nyl. View in CoL and vascular plants Dodartia orientalis View in CoL L., Artemisia terraalbae Krash. , A. austriaca Jacq. View in CoL , A. schrenkiana Ledeb. View in CoL , Limonium gmelini (Willd.) View in CoL , Salsola View in CoL sp., and Trifolium hybridum View in CoL L. (Childebaev et al., 2013). Moreover, the adults and larvae of A. barabensis in the steppe prefer the areas covered by lichen Parmelia vagans View in CoL . It is noteworthy that the variegated color of adults and larvae of A. barabensis allows them to be invisible among the lichens, which is very important for the survival of this species because these large insects are potential victims for the birds (Childebaev et al., 2013).
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Genus |
Angaracris barabensis ( Pallas, 1773 )
Storozhenko, Sergey Yu., Benediktov, Alexander A. & Huang, Jianhua 2017 |
Angaracris neimongolensis
Zeng 1998: 25 |
Angaracris acrohylina:
Li 1998: 77 |
Zeng 1998: 26 |
Otte 1995: 328 |
Zheng 1994: 251 |
Angaracris morulipennis
Zheng 1994: 251 |
Angaracris nigrimarginis
Zheng 1993: 427 |
Angaracris barbensis
Bi 1986: 195 |
Angaracris nigripennis:
Li 1998: 75 |
Zeng 1998: 26 |
Otte 1995: 328 |
Bi 1986: 195 |
Angaracris acrohylina
Bi 1986: 195 |
Angaracris morulimarginis:
Li 1998: 74 |
Otte 1995: 328 |
Bi 1986: 195 |
Angaracris ulashanica
Bi 1986: 195 |
Angaracris nigripennis
Lian 1984: 305 |
Angaracris ulashanicus:
Li 1998: 73 |
Otte 1995: 328 |
Lian 1984: 306 |
Angaracris morulimarginis
Huang 1981: 78 |
Angaracris ulashanicus
Li 1981: 168 |
Angaracris rhadopus
Berezhkov 1951: 21 |
Angaracris barabensis rhodopa:
Furukawa 1939: 66 |
Angaracris rhopodus
Berezhkov 1937: 47 |
Angaracris barabensis:
Benediktov 2016: 469 |
Korsun 2004: 93 |
Cherniachovskij 2002: 167 |
Sergeev 2002: 297 |
Childebaev 2001: 39 |
Dubatolov 1999: 55 |
Benediktov 1998: 792 |
Li 1998: 72 |
Otte 1995: 328 |
Chogsomzhav 1989: 94 |
Kang 1989: 343 |
Vysotskaya 1987: 1190 |
Storozhenko 1986: 317 |
Sergeev 1986: 213 |
Li 1981: 167 |
Chogsomzhav 1977: 87 |
Harz 1975: 446 |
Maran 1974: 16 |
Zheng 1974: 429 |
Chogsomzhav 1972: 183 |
Mistshenko 1972: 113 |
Mistshenko 1968: 495 |
Ivanova 1967: 134 |
Cejchan 1966: 186 |
Popov 1965: 122 |
Bey-Bienko 1964: 282 |
Popov 1964: 1314 |
Berezhkov 1956: 162 |
Bey-Bienko 1951: 604 |
Berezhkov 1951: 21 |
Tarbinsky 1948: 125 |
Zimin 1938: 73 |
Berezhkov 1937: 47 |
Miram 1933: 38 |
Bey-Bienko 1930: 119 |
Bey-Bienko 1930: 498 |
Angaracris rhodopa:
Li 1998: 70 |
Otte 1995: 328 |
Zheng 1993: 428 |
Chogsomzhav 1989: 94 |
Kang 1989: 343 |
Vysotskaya 1987: 1190 |
Bi 1986: 195 |
Storozhenko 1986: 317 |
Sergeev 1986: 213 |
Yin 1982: 84 |
Li 1981: 168 |
Chogsomzhav 1977: 87 |
Maran 1974: 17 |
Zheng 1974: 429 |
Chogsomzhav 1972: 183 |
Mistshenko 1972: 113 |
Mistshenko 1968: 495 |
Ivanova 1967: 134 |
Cejchan 1966: 186 |
Bey-Bienko 1964: 282 |
Popov 1964: 1314 |
Berezhkov 1956: 163 |
Bey-Bienko 1951: 604 |
Tarbinsky 1948: 125 |
Miram 1933: 38 |
Bey-Bienko 1930: 121 |
Bey-Bienko 1930: 498 |
Bryodema barabense var. rhodopa:
Ikonnikov 1911: 256 |
rhodopa:
Kirby 1910: 262 |
Bryodema barabensis var. rhodoptila
Karny 1908: 49 |
Bryodema barabense:
Pylnov 1918: 138 |
Miram 1907: 8 |
Jacobson 1905: 266 |
Bryodema barabense var. rhodopus:
Miram 1907: 8 |
Jacobson 1905: 266 |
Bryodema barabense var. roseipennis
Krauss 1901: 237 |
Bryodema barabensis:
Bey-Bienko 1929: 103 |
Bey-Bienko 1925: 53 |
Kirby 1910: 262 |
Karny 1908: 48 |
Bolivar 1901: 226 |
Zubowsky 1900: 17 |
Zubowsky 1898: 98 |
Saussure 1884: 181 |
Oedipoda thunbergi:
Walker 1870: 734 |
Oedipoda thunbergi Stål, 1861 : 345
Stal 1861: 345 |
Gryllus (Locusta) barabensis
Pallas 1773: 728 |