Seven new Tettigoniidae (Orthoptera) and a new Blattellidae (Blattodea) from the Durmitor area of Montenegro with notes on previously known taxa Author Ingrisch, Sigfrid Author Pavićević, Dragan text Zootaxa 2010 2565 1 41 journal article 47735 10.5281/zenodo.197230 73882c0e-4d4c-4800-bfec-0fd95f877e0e 1175-5326 197230 Poecilimon albolineatus sp. n. Figs. 14 , 15 A, 16B. Holotype (male): Montenegro : Durmitor, Trsa, 1400m , 6.VIII.1988 , S. Ingrisch, in Coll. Muséum d'Histoire naturelle de Genève ( MHNG ). Paratypes : Montenegro , Durmitor: 4 3, 8 Ƥ (including allotype), Trsa, 12–1400m , 6.VIII.1988 , leg. Ingrisch & Pavićević (allotype in MHNG , remainder in CI + CDPV ); 10 3, 3 Ƥ, do., 6.VIII.1989 ; 6 3, 4 Ƥ, Dubrovsko–Bezuje, 1300m , 10.VIII.1989 , leg. Ingrisch & Pavićević (CI + CDPV ); 1 3, N. Boričje, 1300m , 3.VIII.1990 , leg. S. Ingrisch (CI); 14 3, 11 Ƥ, Komarnica, Krivača, 950m , 3.VIII.1991 , leg. Ingrisch & Pavićević (CI + CDPV ); 5 3, same locality, 20.VIII.1995 , leg. D. Pavićević ( CDPV ). Other material studied: Croatia : 1 3, 1 Ƥ, Pod Velez (Mostar), " P. elegans Fieb. det. Br.v.W." ( NMW ); 1 3, Mostar ( ETHZ ). Type locality. Durmitor, Trsa, dry meadow on westerly exposed slope. Measurements. Pronotum male 4.0–5.0, female 4.6–5.1; tegmen male 0.8–1.6, female 0.0–0.5; postfemur male 11.8–16.5, female 14.0–16.7; ovipositor 8.0– 9.1 mm . FIGURE 14. Poecilimon albolineatus sp. n. A, pronotum and tegmina of male in dorsal view; B, do. in lateral view; C, do. of female in dorsal view; D, do. in lateral view; E, subgenital plate of male in ventral view; F, do. of female; G–H, left male cercus in dorsal view; I, ovipositor. Diagnosis. The new species is similar to P. elegans Brunner v.W., 1878 in external appearance. Striking differences are the possession of two distinct steps on the stridulatory file of P. elegans which are lacking in P. albolineatus . Accordingly the calling song differs between both species with regard to syllable structure and repetition rate. Slight differences were also found in external morphology: The fastigium verticis is narrower in P. albolineatus ; index scapus: fastigium verticis = 1.1–1.5 (mean 1.26) in male and 1.0–1.5 (mean 1.20) in female of P. elegans and 1.3–2.1 (mean 1.55) in male and 1.3–1.6 (mean 1.43) in female of P. albolineatus . The female subgenital plate is acute triangular in P. elegans and transverse triangular in P. albolineatus . Coloration is less extended in P. elegans than in the new species. FIGURE 15. Scanning electron micrographs of the stridulatory files of A, Poecilimon albolineatus sp. n. ; B, P. elegans Brunner, 1878 . FIGURE 16. Oscillograms of calling songs of: A, P. elegans Brunner, 1878 : sector of syllable train, upper row = sector of low song, middle row = sector of intense song; lower row = both song types in higher time resolution; B, Poecilimon albolineatus sp. n. : upper row = change from intense to low part of song, lower row = both song types in higher time resolution. Description: Male. Scapus 1.3–2.1 x (mean 1.55 x) broader than fastigium verticis. Fastigium verticis dorsally furrowed. Disc of pronotum ( Fig. 14 A–B) markedly rounded; slightly raised in metazona; apex distinctly concave; ventral margin of paranota slightly concave to almost straight in front, rounded behind. Micropterous. Stridulatory file ( Fig. 15 A) with about 95–96 teeth (n = 2) and with a slight curvature only; gradual transition from larger basal into smaller apical teeth after about 30 basal teeth. Cerci ( Figs. 14 G–H) strongly curved mediad in apical third, slightly flattened before apex and continuously narrowed into apical tooth. Subgenital plate ( Fig. 14 E) curved and narrowing behind middle, apical half with a weak median keel (sometimes only indicated); narrow apical part slightly narrowing towards apex; apex with rounded projections at both corners, truncate, rounded or triangularly incised in between. Female. Scapus 1.3–1.6 x (mean 1.43 x) broader than fastigium verticis. Fastigium verticis dorsally furrowed. Discus of pronotum ( Figs. 14 C–D) markedly rounded; apex slightly concave to almost straight; dorsal margin in lateral view substraight; ventral margin of paranota very slightly concave or straight in front, rounded behind. Squamipterous, tegmina almost completely hidden. Cerci conical. Subgenital plate ( Fig. 14 F) transverse triangular. Ovipositor ( Fig. 14 I) sabre shaped, apical third dentate; with a weak nodule above basal fold, rarely distinct ( 1 female ) or lacking ( 1 female ). Coloration. Male. Green with black stipples. Pronotum with a narrow white median line and with white lateral bands bordered medially in metazona by a red cuneate spot, paranota with a broad white band along ventral margin. Tegmina yellow, stridulatory area with speculum of discus (between cu1b and cu2, sometimes also between cu1a and cu1b) and a spot at the hind margin black or dark brown. Abdominal tergites green with white lateral bands bordered externally by a black line and with a median black or dark green band, interrupted by a white or light green line. Colour pattern less distinct or lacking on apical tergites. Female. Green with black stipples. Pronotum as in male. Tegmina yellow with a black dot at hind margin. Abdominal tergites with a median and 2 lateral white bands, the lateral band bordered externally by a narrow black line; the median band can be light green instead of white. Colour pattern less distinct or lacking on apical tergites. Etymology. Named for the white lateral bands. Distribution. Only specimens from the Dinaric range in Montenegro and Bosna-Herzegovina can be assigned with certainty to the new species. However, the taxonomic status of several populations from the coastal regions of Croatia and Montenegro (as preserved in the Naturhistorisches Museum Wien and other collections) cannot be settled without extensive investigations of the stridulatory behaviour. It might thus prove that the new species covers a wider range. Stridulation ( Fig. 16 B): Stridulation is a syllable train, but the males switch from time to time from repeating syllables of a type A to repeating those of a type B and reverse: Syllables of type A are repeated for a longer period (15–16 s). They consist of 3 elements. A bulk of dense pulses with slightly increasing intensity is immediately followed by a bulk of dense pulses of decreasing intensity (second row in Fig. 16 B). A single pulse is added. Syllable repetition rate is about 6 syllables per second (at 27°C). Syllables of type B were then repeated for about 5 s. They consist of 3–5 separate pulses. Syllable repetition rate is about 5 syllables per second. After this, males switch back to repeat syllables of type A and so on. Stridulation is mainly in the ultrasonic range. Maximum recording intensity using an ultrasonic detector as microphone was at about 40 kHz. Males were singing in the afternoon and evening. The switch between two different syllable types also occurs in the song of P. elegans . The syllable structure of both syllable types and the repetition rates however differ between both species. Stridulation of P. albolineatus also does not agree with the song described by Heller (1988) under P. e l e g a n s from a male from near Kotor. It is thus not impossible that more sibling species of the P. elegans group occur on the Balkan Peninsula.