Eupholidoptera excisa ( Karabag, 1952 )

Taylan, Mehmet Sait, Mol, Abbas, Sevgili, Hasan & Şirin, Deniz, 2019, Bioacoustics characterization of some anatolian endemic and sub-endemic Katydids (Orthoptera; Tettigoniidae; Bradyporinae, Phaneropterinae and Tettigoniinae), Zootaxa 4603 (2), pp. 289-310 : 295-296

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4603.2.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:926C07CF-523B-4CEA-8041-1B9CEA37B7E3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5931240

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E0346D46-2C24-FF82-FF3A-5163FD99149D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Eupholidoptera excisa ( Karabag, 1952 )
status

 

Eupholidoptera excisa ( Karabag, 1952) View in CoL

Distribution. E. excisa is endemic to Anatolia. It was recorded only from Adana and Osmaniye provinces of Turkey ( Figure 7A View FIGURE 7 ) ( Karabağ 1952; Salman 1983; Çıplak et al. 2009; Çıplak et al. 2010).

Song recording. Male specimens collected from Turkey, Osmaniye, Düziçi, Düldüldağı Mountain, 37°21.49’ N, 036°29.22’ E, 1301 m, 26.VII.2017 (by H. Sevgili, D. Şirin, M.S. Taylan & A. Mol) and calling song recorded from two males at 30–32 °C in the field (by D. Şirin & M.S. Taylan).

Description of song. Eight records from two males were evaluated. The calling song consists of a series of isolated syllables ( Figure 7B View FIGURE 7 ) with interval of 1.77– 3.79 s (2.38 ± 0.62). Syllable durations vary between 107 and 128 ms (117.82 ± 4.28). A syllable usually comprises single element and show its maximum intensity is in the middle ( Figure 7C View FIGURE 7 ). Syllables rarely last for a kind of quieter pulse whose duration varies between 2 and 3 ms (2.25 ± 0.09) with interval of 7–10 ms (9.15 ± 0.88).

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