Pandanagraecia porgera, 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 : 30

publication ID

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

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6199499

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/853A87A4-0B30-FF91-C5B6-FD48FA02F93A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Pandanagraecia porgera
status

sp. nov.

Pandanagraecia porgera View in CoL n. sp.

( Figs. 12 View FIGURE 12 J–M; 13C, E, J, K, M)

Type locality. PAPUA NEW GUINEA: Enga, Porgera camp (5°29'3.5''S, 143°8'8.8''E), 2336 m, 15.ix.2009, coll. D.C.F. Rentz—male holotype ( ANSP)

General. General characteristics as described above; brachypterous ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 C, M).

Wings. Tegmen strongly reduced, not reaching posterior margin of first abdominal tergite ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 C). Stridulatory file flat, straight, 1.0 mm long, 0.1 mm wide, with 90 teeth; hind wing extremely reduced. Female tegmina shorter than half of pronotum, overlapping.

Abdomen. Tenth tergite deeply incised apically, with rounded, widely separated posterior lobes ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 J). Cercus relatively robust, evenly curved inwards; its apex thickened, truncate, with small subapical lobe ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 K); apex of cercus slightly bent upwards when seen from side ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 L); epiproct unmodified, triangular. Phallus with weakly developed, paired, slender titillator, its apex narrowly acute ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 M). Subgenital plate strongly enlarged and flattened laterally, its apical half nearly triangular when seen from side, its apex pointed; styli absent. Female subgenital plate triangular, with small, triangular apical incision, posterior lobes triangular, somewhat rounded apically ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 K).

Ovipositor. Ovipositor about as long as hind femur (ratio femur/ovipositor 0.98–1.01); slender, slightly curved, apex with both valvulae smooth, apex pointed ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 J).

Coloration. Coloration red- to orange-brown ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 C); face with wide black vertical band ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 E); pronotum with poorly defined, darker patches in prozona and metazona; abdominal terga with darker, diffused band along mid-line.

Measurements (6 males, 3 females). body w/wings: male 21.2–24 (22.7±1.3), female 28–30 (29.3±1.2); pronotum: male 6–6.2 (6.1±.1), female 6; tegmen: male 3–3.5 (3.1±.2), female 2–3 (2.4±.5); hind femur: male 11–11.8 (11.2±.3), female 12–12.2 (12.1±.1); ovipositor: 12–12.2 (12.1±.1) mm.

Material examined (19 specimens). Papua New Guinea: Enga, Porgera camp, elev. 2336 m (5°29'3.5''S, 143°8'8.8''E), 3.ix.2009, coll. P. Naskrecki & D.C.F. Rentz— 1 female, 2 males (paratypes) ( ANSP); same locality, 15.ix.2009, coll. D.C.F. Rentz— 3 females, 8 males (incl. holotype, 10 paratypes), 2 nymph females, 3 nymph males ( ANSP, MCZ).

Etymology. Named after the type locality, Porgera mining camp in Enga Province of Papua New Guinea.

NEW

University of Newcastle

ANSP

Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

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