Euthemopsaltria laeta, Moulds, 2014

Moulds, M. S., 2014, Euthemopsaltria laeta, a remarkable new genus and species of cicada (Homoptera: Cicadidae: Cicadettinae: Chlorocystini) from Queensland, Australian Entomologist 41 (4), pp. 177-190 : 180-182

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.8290212

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D4E2F0F8-3789-44B0-A1B2-8C9B952E52B5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8290358

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EB429F5F-FFA9-FFF0-FE76-FF5CFEE0FA77

treatment provided by

Tatiana

scientific name

Euthemopsaltria laeta
status

sp. nov.

Euthemopsaltria laeta View in CoL sp. n.

( Figs 1-12 View Figs 1-2 View Figs 3-8 View Figs 9-10 View Fig View Fig )

Types. Holotype ♂, QUEENSLAND: Windsor Tableland , NNW of Mossman, 20.ii.1982, M.S. & B.J. Moulds (in Australian Museum, Sydney). Paratypes: 1 ♂, Kuranda, 25.ix.1981, W.N.B. Quick (in Australian National Insect Collection, Canberra); 3 ♂♂, 9 km along Merragallan Rd, WSW of Malanda , 12.v.2003, 23.vi.2003, 21.ii.2004, J. Olive (in collection of J. Olive, Cairns); 1 ♂, near Millaa Millaa , 17.564°S, 145.579°E, 25.iv.2014, B. Hacobian; GoogleMaps 1 ♀, Malanda district, v.1998, S. Breeden; 1 ♂, same data as holotype but 16.i.1988; 1 ♀, Windsor Tableland , 5.iii.1992, J. Hasenpusch; 1 ♂, Mt Lewis , iv.1987, J. Mallet; 1 ♀, Kuranda, i.1993, S. Lamond; 1 ♀, Kuranda, 11.iv.1981, G. Wood (in collection of M. Moulds, Kuranda); 1 ♂, Kirrama Range, Douglas Ck Rd , 800 m, 9-12.xii.1986, Monteith, Thompson & Hamlet (in Queensland Museum, Brisbane); 1 ♂, Kuranda, F.P. Dodd (in South Australian Museum, Adelaide).

Other material examined. 1 ♂, Mt Glorious State Forest , southeastern Queensland, 25.xii-2.i.87, from Argyrodendron actinophyllum [intercept flight trap] by Y. Basset (in author's collection). This specimen is indistinguishable from those of the type series but in view of its locality being so distant from other known localities it might represent another species.

Description. Male. Head, thorax and abdomen primarily uniformly leaf green although a little paler below; underside partly pale pinkish, mainly at base of abdomen and bases of legs. Head with supra-antennal plates and anterior rim of postclypeus brown, tending paler on supra-antennal plates. Eyes of live specimens pale to light brown. Antennal plates and anterior margin of postclypeus brown, glossy. Rostrum reaching to apices of mid coxae. Timbals ( Fig. 6 View Figs 3-8 ) tending whitish with short ribs light brown; with 11-12 long parallel ribs. Forewings uniformly and strongly tinted green; basal membrane pale orange; venation as in Fig. 4 View Figs 3-8 but individually variable in the vicinity of subapical cells and to a small degree in the apical cells; venation green in live specimens except for much of vein 2A+3A, which is brown. Hind wings very weakly tinted green; venation as in Fig. 5 View Figs 3-8 but with some individual variation in the division of apical cells; venation very pale green. Legs green with fore tibiae brown, the joint between tibia and femur on mid and hind legs brown, all tarsi brown or mostly so, all pretarsal claws black on their distal half.

Genitalia ( Figs 7-10 View Figs 3-8 View Figs 9-10 ) with uncal lobes robust, broad in ventral view, claw-like in lateral view. Aedeagus ( Figs 7-8 View Figs 3-8 ) with theca simple and tubular, gradually tapering to apex, basally turned through 180º, convolute on inner surface; basal plate in dorsal view tending to be rounded, indented at apical midline in a V-shape.

Female. Similar to male. Abdominal segment 9 stocky, dorsal midline clearly less than twice the length of that of tergite 8; apical spine small, blunt; ovipositor sheath not longer than abdominal segment 9.

Distinguishing features. See generic description above.

Measurements (mm). n = 7 males, 4 females. Length of body: male 32.6-34.8 (33.93); female 22.8-23.7 (23.25). Length of forewing: male 33.8-35.7 (34.6); female 30.0-35.9 (32.95). Width of head: male 5.2-5.6 (5.43); female 5.3-5.6 (5.45). Width of pronotum: male 7.8-8.2 (8.03); female 7.1-8.5 (7.8).

Etymology. From the Latin laetus meaning joyful, glad, pleasant.

Distribution and habitat ( Fig. 11 View Fig ). Northeastern Queensland, where it is known only from the Windsor Tableland, Mount Lewis, Kuranda, Malanda and Millaa Millaa districts and the Kirrama Range. Adults have been taken in all months from December to June and at Malanda can be found throughout the year (J. Olive pers. comm.). It is a locally common species around Malanda, Millaa Millaa and on the Windsor Tableland. A single known male from Mount Glorious State Forest in southeastern Queensland may belong to this species.

Adults usually perch amongst tangled vegetation a little beyond reach and are normally difficult to capture but occasionally they occur near ground level where they are easily taken by hand. The species is found only in primary rainforest where it tends to be locally common.

Song. Males sing at dusk when it is almost dark and continue for some 15-20 minutes. The call is loud, resembles a constant, high-pitched whistle and most likely is a pure tone (i.e. resonates at a precise frequency); no recordings are available.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Cicadidae

Genus

Euthemopsaltria

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF