Phryganogryllacris gialaiensis fovealis, Ingrisch, 2018

Ingrisch, Sigfrid, 2018, New taxa and records of Gryllacrididae (Orthoptera, Stenopelmatoidea) from South East Asia and New Guinea with a key to the genera, Zootaxa 4510 (1), pp. 1-278 : 234-235

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4510.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EAA35595-0972-4CF8-A128-16267A59112B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5987342

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/53599456-97BE-FF6B-FF75-F9B0FC8DBB3F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Phryganogryllacris gialaiensis fovealis
status

subsp. nov.

Phryganogryllacris gialaiensis fovealis View in CoL ssp. nov .

Figs. 82 View FIGURE 82 D–F, 83I, 84D

Material examined. Holotype (female): Vietnam: Cat Tien NP, (11°26'N, 107°26'E), 6–16.vii.2012, leg. J. Constant & J. Bresseel (I.G.: 32.161)—(Brussels RBINS). GoogleMaps

Diagnosis. Similar to the female of P. gialaiensis Gorochov, 2005 . It differs by the seventh abdominal sternite being less transverse but still wider than long and by the grooves at apico-lateral angles of that sternite, which are regularly oval and have the rim inside the groove distinctly sclerotised all around ( Fig. 84D View FIGURE 84 ). The female subgenital plate is longer than in the latter species and about as long as the eighth sternite, while in P. gialaiensis it appears (fig. in Gorochov 2005) shorter than the even short eighth sternite. In size, the new subspecies is similar to the values given for P. gialaiensis ( Gorochov 2005) , but pronotum, wings and ovipositor are shorter.

Description. Small to medium sized species. Head: Face narrow ovoid; forehead nearly smooth with scattered shallow impressed dots; fastigium verticis wider than scapus; ocelli distinct; fastigium frontis separated from fastigium verticis by a very fine suture; subocular furrows only indicated ( Fig. 83I View FIGURE 83 ). Abdominal tergites two and three each with two oblique rows of stridulatory pegs (7, 10; 13, 20; n = 1).

Wings surpassing middle of stretched hind tibiae ( Fig. 82D View FIGURE 82 ). Tegmen: Radius with two branches, both forked near tip; media anterior sub-fused in basal quarter with radius, veins attached to each other, but recognizable as two separate veins; cubitus anterior at base with a single branch that forks into two veins, the anterior branch makes a curvature and receives a very short oblique connection vein from MA and shortly after divides again into two parallel branches, MP and CuA1, while the posterior branch (CuA2) does not divide further; cubitus posterior undivided, free throughout; with 4 anal veins, the last short and arising from a common stem with preceding vein.

Legs: Fore coxa with a spine at fore margin; fore and mid femora unarmed; fore and mid tibiae with four pairs of large ventral spines and one pair of smaller ventral spurs; hind femur with 7–8 external and 11–13 internal spines on ventral margins; hind tibia with spaced spines on both dorsal margins, ventral margins with one pre-apical spine; with 3 apical spurs on both sides; dorso-internal apical spur 1.36 times longer than dorso-external spur (15:11) ( Fig. 82F View FIGURE 82 ).

Coloration. General color uniformly yellowish brown. Face uniformly yellowish or greyish brown; compound eyes black. Tegmen semitransparent yellow at base and along midline, along fore and hind margins whitish; veins yellow; hind wing semitransparent white; veins yellow, cross-veins pale.

Male unknown.

Female. Seventh abdominal sternite of normal size; on both sides at latero-apical angle with a rather large and strongly sclerotised oval groove. Subgenital plate tongue-shaped, apex rounded ( Fig. 84D View FIGURE 84 ). Ovipositor moderately long, regularly upcurved and with gradually approaching margins; before tip margins more strongly narrowing, tip narrow subobtuse ( Fig. 82E View FIGURE 82 ).

Measurements (1 female).—body w/wings: 35; body w/o wings: 23; pronotum: 4.1; tegmen: 28; tegmen width: 9; hind femur: 12; antenna: 115; ovipositor: 11 mm.

Etymology. The new subspecies is named for the pair of distinct rounded grooves before the end of the seventh abdominal sternite in female; from Latin fovea (rounded groove).

RBINS

Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences

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