Podacanthophorus vargasi Naskrecki

Piotr Naskrecki, 2000, Katydids of Costa Rica / Vol. 1, Systematics and bioacoustics of the cone-head katydids (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Conocephalinae sensu lato)., Philadelphia, PA: The Orthopterists Society at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, : 128-129

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.270035

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6280470

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/634387D1-A3A9-FF4A-16D4-FAD3FE563E1B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Podacanthophorus vargasi Naskrecki
status

sp. nov.

Podacanthophorus vargasi Naskrecki View in CoL , sp. n.

Figs. 34 View FIG. 34 D-E, 35D, 35G, 35L, 36F, 51D, Map 18 View MAPS 13 - 18

Type locality: Costa Rica:, Limón Prov., La Lola (0.5 mi. W Madre de Dios); type depository: Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia – holotype male

Diagnostic description.— General characteristics as described above; wings in both sexes barely reaching apices of hind femora ( Fig. 36 View FIG. 36 F). Fastigium of vertex 2.5 times as long as eye diameter, narrowly rounded apically, with distinct dorsal furrow dorsally; ventral keel of fastigium distinctly undulant ( Figs. 35 View FIG. 35 D, 35G). Male stridulatory file nearly straight, 0.95 mm long, 111 μm wide, with 209 closely spaced and relatively very wide teeth ( Fig. 51 View FIG. 51 D); stridulatory area on male without secondary venation; mirror square; secondary veinlet next to AA 1 present, thick, divergent from AA 1. Ventral anterior spines of hind femora nearly twice as long as width of hind femur below knee, distinctly flattened ( Fig. 35 View FIG. 35 L).

Tenth tergite of male with two somewhat divergent, wide lobes; female 10th tergite with lobes somewhat narrower, pointed; male cercus straight, basal internal spine curved towards base, slightly inflated subapically and distinctly constricted apically ( Fig. 34 View FIG. 34 D); female cercus simple, elongately conical, somewhat curved. Male titillators needle-like, strongly bent ( Fig. 34 View FIG. 34 E). Ovipositor short, sickle-shaped, about as long as half of hind femur (ratio ovipositor/hind femur 0.53-0.61).

Coloration.— General coloration light green ( Fig. 36 View FIG. 36 F); face creamy white; fastigium reddish-brown; clypeus and mandibles dark purple; metazona of pronotum in male with large, white, round spot; surrounded with dark brown margin; venation of tegmina and posterior edge of tegmina contrastingly yellow.

Measurements.— Table 27 View TABLE 27 .

Distribution.— This species is known from only a few records in northeastern Atlantic portion of the country ( Map 18 View MAPS 13 - 18 ).

Material examined.— COSTA RICA: Cartago Prov., Monumento Nacional Guayabo, A.C.A.C. Amistad, 1 - 31 October 1994 (coll. G. Fonseca) - 1 male (paratype) ( INBio); Heredia Prov., Estac. Magsasay, P.N. Braulio Carillo, elev. 200 m, 15 June 1990 (coll. E. Alcazar) - 1 male (paratype) ( INBio); Estac. Magsasay, P. N. Braulio Carillo, elev. 200 m, 15 March 1991 (coll. A. Fernández) - 1 female (paratype) ( INBio); Puerto Viejo, La Selva Biological Station, elev. 50 - 150 m, 10° 26' N, 84° 1' W, 7 - 10 December 1995 (coll. P. Naskrecki) - 2 females (paratypes) ( PN collection); same locality, 13 April - 10 May 1998 (coll. P. Naskrecki) - 1 female (allotype) ( ANSP); Limón Prov., La Lola (0.5 mi. W Madre de Dios), 2 October 1961 (coll. Hubbell, Cantrall, Cohn) - 1 male (holotype) ( ANSP).

Etymology.— This species is named in honor of Ronald Vargas, a parataxonomist working with the project ALAS (Arthropoda of La Selva).

INBio

National Biodiversity Institute, Costa Rica

ANSP

Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia

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