Angustithorax spiniger Massa, 2015

Massa, Bruno, 2017, New genera, species and records of Afrotropical Phaneropterinae (Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae) preserved at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Bruxelles, Zootaxa 4358 (3), pp. 401-429 : 420-423

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4358.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:25796F05-AAAB-4D1E-B09E-9138635F1D56

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6025264

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039CF14D-FFA5-FFE5-FF30-CFC5B9D0F9FC

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Angustithorax spiniger Massa, 2015
status

 

Angustithorax spiniger Massa, 2015

Figs 16A–16C View FIGURE 16

MaSSa, 2015. ZookeyS, 472: 91.

Material examined. Democratic Republic of Congo, Lulkaburg (= Kananga ) IV–V.1967 (1♂) ; Democratic Republic of Congo, R. Kanzenze-Lualaba 1948, R.P. Lefebure (1♂) ( RBINS) ; Democratic Republic of Congo, Lubumbashi 3.II.1968 (♂ holotype), T. De Stefani (MRT).

Measurements. Body length: 21.3–22.0; length of pronotum: 6.4–6.8; height of pronotum: 4.6–4.8; width of the pronotum: 1.5–2.0; length hind femur: 17.2–19.5; length of hind tibia: 18.3–21.5; length of tegmina: 31.1–37.3; width of tegmina: 7.6–8.1.

Remarks. This species is only known from the holotype, a male collected at Lubumbashi ( Democratic Republic of Congo), and currently is the sole representative of the genus ( Massa 2015). The two specimens listed above concur well with the description of this peculiar taxon, including its very narrow anterior part of the pronotum (see measurements), after which the Latin name of the genus.

Concerning the position of cerci, in the holotype are reported below the subgenital plate, but supposedly artificial in the mounted specimen. Actually the insect holds the cerci otherwise, above the subgenital plate. Cerci are very distinctive: their tip is black and chitinous, with the shape of a small spoon ( Figs 16A, 16B View FIGURE 16 ). The stridulatory file, still not described, is 1.6 mm long, nearly straight, and consists of ca. 45 evenly spaced teeth ( Fig. 16C View FIGURE 16 ).

RBINS

Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences

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