Orthelimaea Karny, 1926
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https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.278093 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6194087 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CD4E37-090C-8853-FF4A-DAD66F0BF8C8 |
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Plazi |
scientific name |
Orthelimaea Karny, 1926 |
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Typus generis: Elimaea (Orthelimaea) leeuwenii Karny 1926
Elimaea (Orthelimaea) Karny 1926 , Treubia 9: 19, 23
Orthelimaea Gorochov 2009 , Proc. Russ. Entomol. Soc. 80: 112
Diagnosis. The genus is characterised by the straight anterior femur and the possession of a small spine at the anterior coxa ( Karny 1926a).
Discussion. Karny (1926a) designated O. leeuwenii as type when he established Orthelimaea as it was then the only species of this subgenus available to him for study. The genus is distributed from India to Java and Sulawesi. O. leeuwenii remained the only Thai species until Gorochov & Storozhenko (2010) described O. bezborodovi .
Orthelimaea populations known to me from Thailand are all very similar in general shape. The males are characterised by strongly recurved cerci ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ) with swollen base (cercus proper) and very long rounded or compressed prolongation that may be regarded as the strongly modified apical spine when compared with the cerci of the Indian species of the genus that have much shorter apical modifications (e.g. figs. 18–22 in Ingrisch 1990). This theory is supported by the fact that only the swollen base of the cerci is hairy as typical for cerci in tettigoniids, while the remaining larger area is smooth. The females have a short, sabre-shaped ovipositor, which also occurs in O. securigera (Brunner, 1878) while O. insignis (Walker, 1869) has a sickle-shaped ovipositor.
In a former publication ( Ingrisch 1998) I gave a short redescription of O. leeuwenii . By that time I had only males from Kanchanaburi province available; other distribution records were based on females. Although I had shortly seen Karnys' specimens of O. leeuwenii before, I overlooked the delicate differences to my specimens. After males from another area became available, it proved that they show some distinct differences in the abdominal terminalia, concealed copulatory structures and the stridulatory file. Moreover, a recent re-examination of one of Karnys' type specimens (in RMNH) showed that none of both male populations fully agrees with that type. Below is a short redescription of O. leeuwenii and the description of two new species. Although Orthelimaea is widespread in Central and Northern Thailand ( Ingrisch 1998), we have to wait until males become available to get an idea of the distribution of the different species concerned.
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Orthelimaea Karny, 1926
Ingrisch, Sigfrid 2011 |
Orthelimaea
Gorochov 2009 |