Catoptropteryx cf. naevia Huxley, 1970

Heller, Klaus-Gerhard, 2019, Provisional checklist of the Tettigonioidea (Insecta: Orthoptera) from São Tomé & Príncipe with taxonomic remarks, bioacoustical data and the description of new taxa, Zootaxa 4563 (1), pp. 41-66 : 44-45

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4563.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AB160951-31C8-4E06-84FB-7C46B94FFDDC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5926039

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6264514E-7D4F-8A17-E8B4-F995FF0DFD6B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Catoptropteryx cf. naevia Huxley, 1970
status

 

Catoptropteryx cf. naevia Huxley, 1970

( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 , 4 View FIGURE 4 )

New record for the island of São Tomé and the state São Tomé and Príncipe

2 first instar nymphs, SAO TOME & PRINCIPE: São Tomé, Praia Inhame Eco Lodge (0°01'N, 6°30'E), 20 m a.s.l., 1–2 v 2018, leg. Martina Heller & Marianne Volleth; one female ( CH 8569) became adult.

According to the morphological characters, mainly the strongly reduced ovipositor ( Fig. 3 A View FIGURE 3 ), the female at hand belongs to the tribe Catoptropterigini , established by Massa (2016), and here to the genus Catoptropteryx Karsch. This genus was revised by Huxley (1970). Using the information presented there the specimen may belong to the West African ( Sierra Leone to Ghana) species C. naevia . Black markings along the edges of the pronotum ( Fig. 4 A View FIGURE 4 ) are found only in a few species; nana Huxley 1970 , capreola (Karsch) , naevia Huxley, 1970 , ambigua Huxley, 1970 , punctulata (Karsch) , extensipes (Karsch) and capreola . Our specimen differs from C. nana in size, from ambigua and extensipes in coloration and from punctulata in shape of the ovipositor. In the coloration of the spinules of the hind femora the female ( Fig. 3 B View FIGURE 3 ) from São Tomé is clearly more similar to C. naevia than to the widespread capreola . It is also slightly larger than capreola . Both species can easily be separated by the number of teeth in the male stridulatory file. So for final clarification—if it is one of these two or a separate species—the study of male specimens is necessary.

The female bears only one strong stridulatory vein on the upper side of the right wing ( Fig. 3 C View FIGURE 3 ), uncommon in Phaneropterinae , but found e.g., in Parapyrrhicia ( Hemp et al. 2017) and some Anaulacomera ( Heller et al. 2019) . In all other Catoptropteryx species the state of this character is unknown. In. C. aurita Huxley, 1970 , however, the right tegmen of the female has about ten stridulatory veins (photos by C. Hemp).

Interestingly the small nymphs of this species showed unexpected black and colorful blue-green markings, especially at the head ( Fig. 4 B, C View FIGURE 4 ). Such markings are at the moment known only from nymphs of Debrona cervina Walker (Hemp, in prep.), another species (and genus) with a strongly reduced ovipositor, currently placed in Otiaphysini . In further nymphal stages these markings become weaker and disappear nearly completely. The black color of paranota in the nymphs is reduced to a dark line in (sub)subadults ( Fig. 4 D, E View FIGURE 4 ). Otherwise the nymphs are nearly completely green.

Measurements (in mm). Length of pronotum 4.5, hind femora 22, tegmina 31, ovipositor 2.6, width of tegmina 6.5.

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