Parapyrrhicia diamantina, Hemp & Heller & Warchałowska-Śliwa & Grzywacz & Hemp, 2017

Hemp, Claudia, Heller, Klaus-Gerhard, Warchałowska-Śliwa, Elżbieta, Grzywacz, Beata & Hemp, Andreas, 2017, Review of the East African species of the phaneropterine genus Parapyrrhicia Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1891 (Insecta: Orthoptera): secret communication of a forest-bound taxon, Organisms Diversity & Evolution (New York, N. Y.) 17 (1), pp. 231-250 : 237-238

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1007/s13127-016-0303-5

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D8E00B-FFB6-D601-4969-FF477A8BFBE5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Parapyrrhicia diamantina
status

sp. nov.

Parapyrrhicia diamantina View in CoL n. sp. C. Hemp

http://lsid.speciesfile.org/urn:lsid: Orthoptera .speciesfile. org:TaxonName:492598

Holotype male: Tanzania, West Usambara Mountains , Lutindi forest, 5°04′00″ S 38°22′00″ E, submontane forest, 1250 m, December 2014; leg. C Hemp. Depository: MfN. GoogleMaps

Paratype. 1 female, same data as holotype but March 2014; leg. C Hemp. Depository: MfN GoogleMaps .

Further paratype material: two males, four females, same data as holotype but March 2014, January 2015 and September 2015; leg. C Hemp (collection C. Hemp) GoogleMaps .

Description Male ( Fig. 4c View Fig ). Color green, tegmina dark green with dark brown to black patch on stridulatory area of left tegmen, in the central part around stridulatory file shiny white ( Fig. 11 View Fig ). On pronotum, abdomen and legs numerous reddish dots. Head and antennae: Antennae green, thin, about total length of insect. Fastigium as for genus, compressed and narrower than first antennal segment, sulcate above, concave in profile. Eyes circular, prominent, in life white often with one dark median stripe, sometimes with up to three thinner stripes before median broader stripe, sometimes mixed white and red or green, glinting. Rarely with dark eyes ( Fig. 4d View Fig ). Thorax: Pronotum without lateral carinae, surface smooth. Tegmina and wings: Both pairs of wings fully developed, alae surpassing tegmina. Stridulatory file as in Fig. 12e View Fig with 66 teeth (n = 1). Legs: Legs long and slender, fore tibiae with oval, open tympana, slightly thickened in this area. Fore femora with one anterior ventral row of tiny brown-tipped spinules; spinules irregularly distributed over femoral length, about six to ten. Mid femora with one posterior ventral row of three to six spinules. Hind femora with two to ten tiny spinules ventrally on anterior side. Fore and mid tibiae with two to four dorsal spurs and with a pair of ventral spurs. Hind tibiae with three apical spurs on each side and four rows of numerous small spinules getting denser distally. Tarsi cream to white. Abdomen: Abdomen green with numerous reddish dots, venter whitish. Laterally on each side ivory white patch, often stigmata also marked white ( Fig. 11 View Fig ). Cerci stout till about half length and setose producing midway a sclerotized dent ( Fig. 12a, c View Fig ; Fig. 6b View Fig ), then laterally compressed and expanded ending in two tips, one stouter and incurved the other a flat finger-like projection ( Fig. 12d View Fig , arrow). Subgenital plate very large, elongated, deeply divided into two laterally compressed and apically expanded lobes ( Fig. 12a–c View Fig ). Between supra-anal plate and subgenital plate medially thorn-like elongated titillator with sclerotized tip ( Fig. 12b View Fig ).

Female. As male but without dark and white patch on left tegmen but often with two dark patches at the tegmina bases and brown costal margins ( Fig. 4d View Fig ). The tenth abdominal tergite evenly curved with shallow incision medially. Ovipositor as in Fig. 7e View Fig , subgenital plate as in Fig. 7f View Fig , elongated and divided into two lobes.

Nymphs. Similar to adults ( Fig. 13 View Fig ).

Measurements Males (n = 2): Total length of body, 19.5– 22 mm (including subgenital plate); median length of pronotum, 4.5–4.6 mm; length of hind femur, 19.5– 20.5 mm; length of tegmina 34–35 mm.

Measurements Females (n = 6). Total length of body, 20– 22.5 mm; median length of pronotum, 5.2–5.3 mm; length of hind femur, 21.5–23 mm; length of tegmina, 35–37 mm; ovipositor, 9.5–10 mm.

Etymology. The eyes are sparkling like a diamond in many specimens, therefore diamantina .

Habitat. Submontane forest.

Biology. Night active species of the tree layer within closed forest. Seasonal species, adults only found from about November/December to March/April.

Distribution. At present only known from the type locality, Lutindi forest in the West Usambara Mountains, Tanzania.

MfN

Museum für Naturkunde

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