Diaphanogryllacris opulenta, 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 : 168-169

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.5987191

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/53599456-97F0-FF29-FF75-F950FE0CB927

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Diaphanogryllacris opulenta
status

sp. nov.

Diaphanogryllacris opulenta View in CoL sp. nov.

Figs. 53I View FIGURE 53 , 55B, 55K View FIGURE 55 , 56 View FIGURE 56 D–F, 58K–N

Material examined. Holotype male: Thailand: Tak, Ban Mae Salit, Monkrating resort, elev. 700–800 m (17°30'N, 98°5'E), 15–21.v.1988, leg. S. Ingrisch—(Bonn ZFMK). GoogleMaps

Diagnosis. The new species differs from all other species of the genus so far described by the short but very wide step-like declined apical margin of the ninth abdominal tergite in male, from which in middle, not at lateral angles of apical excision, a pair of short, slightly sinuate, acute spines is projecting posteriorly and not curved down as in other species. This condition resembles somewhat the condition in D. aequalis ( Walker, 1869) or D. translucens ( Serville, 1838) , but those species have very short, simple apical spines on ninth tergite while in D. opulenta sp. nov. they are long and complex. The projections of the tenth abdominal tergite are elongate beamshaped with upcurved subacute tip, inserted between the spines of the ninth tergite and little longer than these. The base of the phallus sclerite that is not simply divided and recurved as in other species but compressed, widened and anchored at the phallus by a semi-sclerotised structure of the phallus membrane, which is so far unknown from any other species of the genus.

Description. Rather large for the genus. Head: Face oval; nearly smooth; fastigium verticis wider than scapus; ocelli distinct; fastigium frontis separated from fastigium verticis by a very fine suture; subocular furrows shallow ( Fig. 55B View FIGURE 55 ). Abdomen with distinct stridulatory pegs on second and third tergites, only first row of second tergite very faint (3, 14; 13, 19; n = 1 male; Fig. 55K View FIGURE 55 ).

Wings reaching or little surpassing middle of stretched hind tibia ( Fig. 53I View FIGURE 53 ). Tegmen: Radius with two branches, both forked near tip; media anterior free, in subbasal area closely approached to radius; cubitus anterior at base with a single branch that forks into two veins, the anterior branch makes a curvature and receives an 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, last two with common stem.

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 6–7 external and 6–7 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.

Coloration. General color light brown; vertex brown with black spot behind compound eyes and on fastigium verticis; pronotum brown with large black spot in middle interrupted by four small brown spots; legs of general color. Face yellowish brown with black spots below compound eyes and at baso-lateral angles of clypeus. Tegmen semi-transparent white, veins and veinlets brown; towards base little darker; hind wing semi-transparent white, veins and veinlets brown.

Male. Eighth abdominal tergite only little prolonged. Ninth abdominal tergite globular, at apical margin with a wide step-like emargination, from lateral angles of this emargination a pair of long, narrow, faintly sinuate spines projecting backward. Tenth abdominal tergite in apical view band-shaped, furrowed in middle, on both sides of furrow, and between spines of ninth tergite, with an upcurved, hook-shaped, acute spine; in ventral view this structure continues as furrowed plate towards inside body ( Figs. 56 View FIGURE 56 D–E). Subgenital plate widening from base to apical margin; apical margin on both sides with bases of long and stout styli, in middle with a rather wide projection dividing into two cones ( Fig. 56F View FIGURE 56 ). Phallus sclerite elongate, slightly sinuate with subacute tip; at base strongly widened toward both sides but flattened and with irregular margin; dark, stiffened, bulging and striated structures of the phallus membrane forming an embracing structure around that base ( Figs. 58 View FIGURE 58 K–N).

Measurements (1 male).—body w/wings: 53; body w/o wings: 38; pronotum: 6.8; tegmen: 43; tegmen width: 15.5; hind femur: 20.5; antenna: 130 mm.

Etymology. The new species is named for its large, extended phallus sclerite; from Latin opulentus, opulenta (considerably large, luxuriant).

ZFMK

Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig

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