Gryllus brevicaudus Weissman, Rentz, and Alexander

Weissman, David B. & Gray, David A., 2019, Crickets of the genus Gryllus in the United States (Orthoptera: Gryllidae: Gryllinae), Zootaxa 4705 (1), pp. 1-277 : 36-40

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4705.1.1

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lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F534C43A-AB09-4CB3-9B08-FD5BDFD90298

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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/182387A8-0942-FFB5-51F6-FF4B02B2FC3D

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scientific name

Gryllus brevicaudus Weissman, Rentz, and Alexander
status

 

Gryllus brevicaudus Weissman, Rentz, and Alexander

Short-Tailed Field Cricket

Figs 17–21 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21 , Table 1 View TABLE 1

1980 Gryllus brevicaudus . Weissman et al. 1980, p. 338. Holotype male ( Fig. 18 View FIGURE 18 ): California, Santa Clara Co., Palo Alto , Type deposited at CAS, Entomology type #13219.

1977 ‘ Gryllus VIII’, Weissman & Rentz (1977a).

Gryllus #8’ of DBW notebooks.

Distribution. California only. Restricted to areas of central California usually surrounding the Central Valley.

Recognition characters and song. A small to medium sized, always short hind-winged cricket (see measurements Table 1 View TABLE 1 , p. 18) that when alive or recently killed, is immediately recognizable because of contrast between totally black body and legs versus unique tegmina that have an area, especially in males (see Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 ), of yellow-orange tinge on the lateral field and anteriorly where the tegmina attach to the body. When alive, usually with golden pubescence on pronotum and hind femurs. Ovipositor shortest of any described Gryllus ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 ), even shorter than those of smallest G. veletis from Mirror Pool, North Dakota. Hind femur longer than cerci, cerci usually longer than ovipositor in situ. Song ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 ; R03–8) 3–6 p/c, PR usually 20–30. Song similar to G. veletisoides but never microsympatric (although individuals synchronic) and G. brevicaudus separable from the latter by its longer cerci, shorter ovipositor, tegmina with a yellow-orange tinge.

Derivation of name. “brevicaudus” or “short tailed” in reference to having the shortest known ovipositor in the genus Gryllus .

Geographic range. Fig. 21 View FIGURE 21 .

Habitat. Always in open grasslands, both sandstone and serpentine, below 610 m elevation. When ground wet and saturated from winter and spring rains, under rocks (SE Paicines, S03-8; Clayton, S19-3). As grasslands dry out and soil cracks form, individuals then move into these deep cracks (Jasper Ridge, S93-26; W Springville, S09-37) where they can be difficult to flush with water. Often at moderate to high density, when found within appropriate habitat, as gauged by the number of singing males.

Life cycle and seasonal occurrence. One generation/year. No egg diapause. Along with G. lineaticeps , probably the earliest maturing Gryllus species in central California with first adults singing in mid-winter when males can be heard during warm, early-March days. Latest known collection date is 27 August, but usually no males heard in most populations well before then. We wonder if some August collected adults represent areas where they can retreat into deep, cool soil cracks, which prolongs survival. This is one species where we have been able to do multiple surveys during the season—on Jasper Ridge, San Mateo Co., there is clearly only one generation. Nymphs from laboratory hatched eggs do not grow well and most stop developing as middle/late instars, perhaps indicating the presence of an obligate winter diapause.

Variation. Size: San Luis Obispo Co. specimens average larger body size, have longer ovipositors, and longer stridulatory file than individuals from more northern localities. Color: After death, the yellow-orange tegmina areas (especially of males) darken with drying and time (see Fig. 18 View FIGURE 18 of holotype).

Specimens examined. California: Contra Costa Co. Clayton, Russelmann Park Road , 252m, 12-iv-2019 , 37° 54’ 56.98” -121° 54’ 17.95” (S19-3). Lafayette, 21-vi-1965 ( CIS) . Marsh Creek , 28-iv-1957 ( CIS) . Mt. Diablo , 750’, 29-iv-1923; 21-vi-1940 ( CIS) ; 13-vii-1982, (S82-39). San Benito Co. Hollister, 1-viii-1980 (S80-55) . 18 m SE Paicines , 1480’, 21-iii-2003 (S03-8) . San Luis Obispo Co., Carrizo Plain National Monument, 2-3 m N Caliente Range , 700m, 27-iii-2002 , 35° 10’ 30” -119° 51’ 50” P. Schiffman ( DAG 2002-010 ). San Luis Obispo 14-v- 1967; 27-viii- 1967. 1 km E Santa Margarita 14-v-1967 . El Chorro Regional Park Campground, 307’, 13-vii-2017, 35.33163 -120.73091 °. San Mateo Co. Stanford University Jasper Ridge, 21-iii-1970, 2-v-1992 (S92-44) , 2-v-1993 (S93-26) , 18-v-2016 (16-1). Santa Clara Co. Mountain View, 9-vi-1981 (S81-13) ; Palo Alto, field at Foothill Expressway and Stanford Avenue, 24-vii-1974, 23-v-1987 (S87-33). Solano Co. 20 m NW Rio Vista 6-v-1978 , N. Corey ( CIS). Tulare Co. 10 m W Springville , 700’ 29-v-2009 (S09-37).

DNA. Multilocus G3393 Jasper Ridge, S16-1, closest extant relative may be G. insularis Scudder from Guadalupe Island, Baja California Norte, MX; ITS2 also shows a close relationship between G. brevicaudus and G. insularis ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 ).

Discussion. This species is one of the few Gryllus that can be morphologically recognized in museum collections. Nevertheless, it is rarely collected perhaps because it matures in winter/spring, and males sing from the edges of deep cracks from which they are difficult to flush with water. Once days warm up, males sing only at night. Oatmeal trails through known populations can attract females and occasionally males.

We wonder if this species’ short ovipositor is associated with egg laying deep in cracks, where humidity may be higher, that are so prevalent in grassy fields during California’s dry spring and summer.

We have flushed individuals of G. lineaticeps from the same soil cracks (Mt. View, S81-13; Mt. Diablo, S82-39; Clayton, S19-3) in which G. brevicaudus males were singing. G. integer can also be singing at such localities.

One adult male (Jasper Ridge, S93-26) parasitized by unidentified tachinid.

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

CIS

Cranbrook Institute of Science

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