Pandanagraecia stylata, Naskrecki, Piotr & Rentz, David C. F., 2010

Naskrecki, Piotr & Rentz, David C. F., 2010, Studies in the orthopteran fauna of Melanesia: New katydids of the tribe Agraeciini from Papua New Guinea (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Conocephalinae), Zootaxa 2664, pp. 1-35 : 34

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.276316

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6199505

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/853A87A4-0B0C-FFAD-C5B6-FD48FA0DF93A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Pandanagraecia stylata
status

sp. nov.

Pandanagraecia stylata View in CoL n. sp.

( Figs. 12 View FIGURE 12 A–E; 13A, G, I, L, N)

Type locality. PAPUA NEW GUINEA: Western Province, Muller Range, Gugusu (5°43'45.3''S, 142°15'47.8''E), 515 m, 3–10.ix.2009, coll. P. Naskrecki & D.C.F. Rentz—male holotype ( ANSP)

General. General characteristics as described above; macropterous ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 A).

Wings. Tegmen fully developed, reaching or slightly surpassing apex of abdomen, but not reaching apex of hind tibia ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 A); anterior margin straight; apex narrowly rounded. Veins Sc, Rn and M straight, nearly parallel, only slightly divergent towards apex; Rs very short, branching off near apex. Stridulatory file nearly straight, flat, 1.4 mm long, 0.14 mm wide, with 120 teeth.

Abdomen. Tenth tergite with small, narrowly elliptical incision, posterior lobes narrowly triangular ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 A). Cercus long, slender, evenly curved inwards; its apex slightly expanded dorso-ventrally, distinctly curved inwards, and with small, ventral subapical lobe ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 B). Phallus with weakly developed, paired, slender titillator, its apex narrowly acute ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 E). Subgenital plate strongly flattened laterally in posterior half, narrow at base, expanded towards apex ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 C); posterior surface of expanded part of subgenital plate with semicircular groove, its edges with small, dark spines; styli reduced, but distinctly noticeable, about twice as long as wide ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 D). Female subgenital plate about as long as wide, with small, triangular incision; posterior lobes acute ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 I).

Coloration. Coloration light brown ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 A); face with sharply defined, black vertical band ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 G); pronotum with poorly defined, darker patches in prozona and metazona; abdominal terga without markings. Wings with venation in costal field yellow, spaces between veins dark brown.

Measurements (1 male, 6 females). body w/wings: male 24, female 34–41.5 (38.1±3.1); body w/o wings: male 24, female 25–29 (26.8±1.9); pronotum: male 7, female 7–8 (7.7±.4); tegmen: male 15, female 16–18 (17.1±.9); hind femur: male 15.5, female 17–20 (18.4±1); ovipositor: 17–18 (17.6±.5) mm.

Material examined (9 specimens). Papua New Guinea: Western Province, Muller Range, Gugusu , elev. 515 m (5°43'45.3''S, 142°15'47.8''E), 3–10.ix.2009, coll. P. Naskrecki & D.C.F. Rentz— 1 male, 7 females (holotype, paratypes) ( ANSP, MCZ); Muller Range, Sawetau , elev. 1550–1700 m (5°39'23.7''S, 142°18'16.5''E), 11–17.ix.2009, coll. P. Naskrecki & D.C.F. Rentz—1 nymph male ( MCZ).

Etymology. Named in reference to the presence of clearly visible styli on the subgenital plate of the male.

NEW

University of Newcastle

ANSP

Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

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