Hemiandrus jacinda, Trewick, 2021

Trewick, Steven A., 2021, A new species of large Hemiandrus ground wētā (Orthoptera: Anostostomatidae) from North Island, New Zealand, Zootaxa 4942 (2), pp. 207-218 : 209-217

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4942.2.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F717589B-2303-4270-8414-09CCB42D9AD6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4600475

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B98129CE-B464-4C32-98E6-8B4B2F007F57

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:B98129CE-B464-4C32-98E6-8B4B2F007F57

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Hemiandrus jacinda
status

sp. nov.

Hemiandrus jacinda sp. nov.

Diagnosis. A comparatively large, long-limbed, glossy and predominantly orange-red Hemiandrus . The maxillary palp with 3rd segment naked and 4th segment pilose on distal section. Body with posterior edges of segments darker than anterior, and with longitudinal bands. Fore tibiae with single articulated superior prolateral linear spine. Mid tibiae 1½ times length of pronotum. Hind femura with one prolateral apical spine and one retrolateral alpical spine. Adult female with weakly curved ovipositor ¾ body length and a pair of slerotised cusps on the posterior margin of sternite S6. Male with protruding section of the subgenital plate forming two fingers.

Etymology. This long-limbed, red species is named for New Zealand Prime Minister (2017–) Jacinda Kate Laurell Ardern.

Description. Dimensions. Adult female (NMNZ AI049808, formerly GW1328) total length (from anterior of head to posterior tip of ovipositor) about 50mm; antennna ~ 75mm; pBL (anterior of head to posterior of abdomen) 28.9mm; pronotum length 7.7mm; ovipositor 21.51; fore femur length 8.87mm; mid femur length 12.49mm; hind femur length 25.3mm and depth 6.43mm; fore tibia length 10.29mm; mid tibia length 11.58mm; hind tibia length 24mm; hind tarsus 11.45mm. Adult male (NMNZ AI049810, formerly GW208) pBL 24.3mm; PL 6.11mm; fore femur length 8.2mm; mid femur length 9.3mm; hind femur length 22mm and depth 5.26mm; hind tibia length 20.24; hind tarsus length 9.84mm.

Head. Glabrous and glossy, prominent fastigium black with large white lateral ocelli; frons pale with dark patches and large white median ocellus; vertex and occiput with black to orange-brown pattern; gena cream with few dark patches; clypeus cream; labrum mostly cream to pale orange at the periphery which bears stout setae; mandibles cream to pale orange with dark proximal patch and darkening to near black sclerotised tips and ventral surfaces cream; palps cream. Antennae at least twice as long as body, pale orange-brown with pale scape and pedestal which along with first third is glabrous, distal 60% pilose. Eyes black. 5th segment of maxillary palp pilose, 4th segment 55% pilose, remainder of 4th segment and segments 1–3 with sparse pale setae ( Figure 2 View FIGURE 2 ).

Thorax. Pronotum glabrous and microsculptured, broader than long at the posterior margin, predominantly orange-scarlet in colour with near black pigmentation on anterior margins and orange-brown band along posterior margin, a small cream patch on either side at the anterior-ventral corner, a pair of red-brown markings positioned either side of the midline in the centre of the pronotum align with similar pigmentation on meso- and metanotum and tergites to form two longitudinal stripes. Meso- and metanotum similar in colouring to abdominal tergites. Sternum cream-white with dark tips to four sternal spines.

Legs. Coxae and trochanters white-cream. Femorae yellow-cream at base grading to orange-red and darkest at distal margins, glossy, glabrous but with sparse short setae. Fore and mid femora lack spines. Hind femora without spines except at distal apex where there is a dark, stout, sharp, spine on both sides. The prolateral spine is on the inferior surface of the joint while the retrolateral one is on the distal margin ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 ). All tibiae orange-red to rusty brown on proximal half, shading to cream on distal portion, except hind tibiae that are pigmented except for distal 15–20% ( Figure 4 View FIGURE 4 ). Tarsi cream or orange tinted, glabrous with sparse orange setae most dense at apex of segment 1 near brown claw.

Fore tibiae lack tympana ( Figure 4 View FIGURE 4 ). Fore and mid tibiae armed with long, erect, pigmented articulated spines arranged unevenly. Fore tibiae: a single prolateral linear spine on the superior surface plus a pair of apical spines; four prolateral and four retrolateral linear spines on the inferior surface plus an apical pair. Mid tibiae: two prolateral and three retrolateral linear spines on the superior surface plus a pair of apical spines that are set back from the apex (the combination might be interpreted as three prolateral and four retrolateral articulated spines without apicals); inferior surface has four prolateral and four retrolateral spines plus a pair of apicals. Hind tibiae: five or six unpaired small articulated linear spines along the inferior surface; seven or eight small fixed spines on prolateral and retrolateral angles of the superior surface; a pair of long, sturdy, dark-tipped, articulated apical spines displaced a little from the distal end of the superior surface with the retrolateral spine being more distal than the prolateral one; a pair of small subapical spines at the base of the inferior surface; a pair of larger inferior apical spines; a pair of long, stout superior apical spines. Tarsi: cream, four-segmented and with few setae.

Abdomen. Glabrous and microsculptured above. Tergites predominantly orange to scarlet in colour with dark and pale markings; dark brown to black on posterior margins and bearing a number of non-melanised spots.Anterior portion of tergites non-melanised, pale orange but with darker red-brown patch on either side of midline. Lateral surfaces of tergites 1–3 bear patches of posterior-pointing tubercles that probably engage with similar pegs on the retrolateral surface of hind femur as in stridulation ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 ). Cerci cream. Sternites cream to yellow.

Female. Ovipositor long (about 2/3rds length of the body) and gently curved, yellow at base, becoming deep rusty-brown, ( Figure 5 View FIGURE 5 ). Cerci elongate, cylindrical, bearing dense short hairs and sparse very long hairs, except for tip which is naked with one or two hairs at the tip. Posterior margins of tergites 1–10 simple; posterior margins of sternites 1–5 and 7 simple; sternite S6 with broad weak medial depression and pair of sclerotised cusps; subgenital plate triangular and tapering to a sharp point.

Male. Terminalia comprise a pair of upright dark-tipped paraprocts, a pair of long tapering cerci clothed in short and long hairs and subgenital plate that is deeply incised forming two fingers with short, cylindrical, naked styli. The subgenital plate has longish golden hairs on the dorso-lateral margin but is glabrous beneath. Sternites glossy. Posterior margins of tergites 1–8 simple; the 9 th tergite (T9) forms a pair of blunt lobes on posterior margin; T10 has a pair of short, dark anterior-facing hooked falci aligned with T9 lobes ( Figure 6 View FIGURE 6 ).

Type data. HOLOTYPE: adult female, near Crosbies Hut, Te Puru stream headwaters, Thames, CL, October 2020, Danilo Hegg ( NMNZ AI.049808, previously MPN GW1328) inaturalist.nz/observations/63866403 . PARATYPE: adult male, near Pomarangai track, Maugamangero, Herangi Ranges, WO, March 2005, Peter Lei ( NMNZ AI.049810, previously MPN GW208) .

Material examined. Near Crosbies Hut, Te Puru stream headwaters, Thames, CL, 30/x/2020, GW1328 ♀, inaturalist.nz/observations/63866403. Mangahorehore ridge, Puketi Forest , 26/xi/1992, ND, GW903♁. Near Pomarangai track, Maugamangero, Herangi Ranges, WO, 1/iii/2005, GW208 ♁.

Other records. Near Te Tuhi track, Waiteariki stream headwaters, Kaimai Range, BP, 14/ii/2009, ♀ , inaturalist. nz/observations/7771552. Near North-South track, Wairere stream headwaters, Kaimai Range, BP, 17/vi/2006, ♀ , inaturalist.nz/observations/7771459. Near Mount Whareorina , Herangi Ranges, WO, 25/ix/2017, ♀ , inaturalist. nz/observations/8131115. Waipoua Forest , Wairau Summit (probably Parataiko Range), ND, 7–14/xii/1995, ♁, det. B.L.Taylor-Smith, AMNZ5182 View Materials . Kinleith Forest , Cochrane Road, BP, 10/v/2007, ♀, det. B.L.Taylor-Smith, AMN5222 . Waipoua Forest , Yakas Track, ND, 2–16/ix/1998, ♁, NZAC03015722 View Materials .

Phylogenetic relationship. Analysis of an alignment of 40 mtDNA COI sequences representing 16 described and 2 putative New Zealand Hemiandrus taxa. The phylogenetic tree resolved H. jacinda sp. nov. as a genetically distinct cluster of haplotypes representing three individuals from Moehau, Coromandel and Kaimai ranges ( Figure 7 View FIGURE 7 ). They form a novel lineage that is the only North Island representative of this Hemiandrus clade. Analysis of genetic distances using the Kimura 2 parameter model of DNA evolution, estimated using the Species Delimination plugin of Geneious v10.2 revealed an average of 2.3% K2P among H. jacinda sp. nov. sequences, and a mean divergence of 14.0% from the closest relative in the analysis ( Hemindrus focalis ).

Distribution. Sparse records from native wet forests in Northland, Bay of Plenty, Waikato and Coromandel in the upper North Island, New Zealand ( Figure 8 View FIGURE 8 ).

Comments. Hemiandrus jacinda sp. nov. is the largest species of this genus in North Island, New Zealand. It is sympatric with H. pallitarsis ( Trewick et al. 2020) and H. nox ( Taylor-Smith et al. 2016) . Hemiandrus brucei and H. luna may also exist in the same range. Hemiandrus pallitarsis is a member of the short-ovipositor clade of small to medium sized (partial body length 8–12mm) ground wētā ( Chappell et al. 2012; Trewick et al. 2020). Hemiandrus nox , H. brucei and H. luna are small (partial body length <10mm), dark, long-ovipositor species belonging to the H. maculifrons complex ( Taylor-Smith et al. 2016). In addition to size and colour adult Hemiandrus jacinda sp. nov. are readily distinguished from other co-occurring ground wētā by quantitative traits including: more articulated spines on inferior surface of hind tibiae; two apical spines on hind femura. Females have prominent sclerotized cusps on posterior margin of sternite S6. Males have a distinctive, deeply cleft subgenital plate ( Figure 9 View FIGURE 9 ); T9 has two blunt lobes c.f. a single medial lobe in H. pallitarsis and a pair of pointed lobes in H. nox ; T10 falci aligned with T9 lobes c.f. T10 falci close together in H. pallitarsis and hidden beneath T 9 in H. nox .

Available photographs suggest that the degree of melanisation varies in H. jacinda sp. nov. ( Figure 1 View FIGURE 1 ). This could be ontogenetic in which case juveniles may by paler in colour and dominated by orange/red (see Figure 1E View FIGURE 1 ).

Hemiandrus jacinda sp. nov. probably represents the same entity previously referred to by the tag-name H. ‘elegans’ ( Johns 2001; Trewick et al. 2016) and referred to as Hemiandrus ‘Moehau’ ( Sherley 1998; Trewick et al. 2012). The Department of Conservation status report ( Trewick et al. 2016) records this taxon as at risk, naturally uncommon and sparse. The scarcity of H. jacinda sp. nov. despite a relatively wide geographic range and close proximity to region of highest human population which can influence biological discovery ( Taylor-Smith et al. 2019), is a cause for concern. That such a large and striking animal can elude observation suggests that either its behaviour is highly effective at minimising detection or it now exists at low density.

NMNZ

Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

Family

Chorotypidae

Genus

Hemiandrus

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