Flospes Ma & He, 2022

He, Zhi-Xin, Ma, Li-Bin, Zhang, Tao & Miao, Xiao-Lan, 2022, Flospes gen. nov. (Orthoptera, Trigonidiidae, Trigonidiinae), a genus of swordtail crickets from China, with two new species and new combinations, ZooKeys 1090, pp. 113-128 : 113

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1090.77830

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:743E6519-5458-4666-AB42-637FC74699CB

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/33ADF11D-F7A6-4886-8061-42AB035ED6A6

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:33ADF11D-F7A6-4886-8061-42AB035ED6A6

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Flospes Ma & He
status

gen. nov.

Genus Flospes Ma & He gen. nov.

Type species.

Amusurgus fujianensis (= Flospes fujianensis ).

Etymology.

The genus name " Flospes " is a Latin word (= flower), which refers to the colorful body of the members of the genus (the fore and median femora are proximally black and distally white, the hind femur bears a dark brown band, and the cercus is black and white).

Diagnosis.

Head almost as wide as anterior margin of pronotum. Frons slightly convex. Maxillary palpi black and white. Tegmen similar in both sexes (male lack of stridulatory apparatus). The internal tympanum large and long-oval, and the external one replaced by a small pit. The hind tibia bears three pairs of dorsal spurs. The legs and cercus black and white. The lateral lobes of epiphallus rod-like and ectoparamere enormously enlarged (much wider than epiphallic lateral lobe). The apex of female ovipositor expanded, blade-like and reddish brown.

Remarks.

Similar to Amusurgus , the members of them are silent, pubescent and bearing rod-like epiphallic lateral lobes, but the species of the new has colorful legs and cercus, as well as ectoparamere that is enormously enlarged and almost membranous. The new genus is distinguished from Sectus by the absence of stridulatory apparatus and the presence epiphallic lobes. It differs from the genus Metiochodes Chopard, 1932 in that its ectoparamere is enlarged and membranous.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

Family

Trigonidiidae