Dendrobia plagata, Hemp & Heller, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4664.3.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BE28074F-46B8-4FA5-B6DB-F1276A4C7C40 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/98473E49-FFE7-8664-A0BD-FE08FBD9FE1E |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Dendrobia plagata |
status |
sp. nov. |
Dendrobia plagata View in CoL n. sp. Hemp C.
( Figs. 35–38 View FIGURE 35 View FIGURE 36 View FIGURE 37 View FIGURE 38 , 41 View FIGURE 41 , 42 View FIGURE 42 , Table 1 View TABLE 1 )
Holotype: male. Tanzania, Nguru Mountains , montane forest, March 2019. 5 females, same data as holotype but February 2017, March 2017 and July 2017. Depository: collection C. Hemp.
Description. Male. Habitus and colour. Plump medium-sized insect, predominantly leaf green with brown-red- dish broad fascia on margins where tegmina meet medially. Remaining part of tegmina with net-like pattern of dark green veins on light green ground. Pronotum with 6 longish dark dots on cream coloured ground arranged in pairs ( Fig. 35 A, C View FIGURE 35 ). Eyes light. Head and antennae. Face broad, predominantly of whitish to green colour. Antennae cream coloured with scapus and first antennal segment green. Fore and mid femora with 4 stout spines ventro-an- teriorly, white, with black tips. Hind femora with 8 broad-based spines ventro-anteriorly along whole length and 4 stout spines near joints to tibiae ventro-posteriorly. Stridulatory file with about 150 teeth on 3.2 mm, in the middle tooth interval 22 µm (45 teeth/mm). Abdomen. Last abdominal tergite broad with almost straight posterior margin with a median depression. Cerci vertically flattened, with a blunt outer branch and an inner branch with up-lifted sclerotized tip ( Fig. 36 B View FIGURE 36 ). Subgenital plate broad, posterior margin v-shaped incised, with thin styli.
Female. Similar in habitus and colour as male with same spination. Ovipositor long, slightly up-curved with smooth sclerotized valves ( Fig. 35 B, D View FIGURE 35 ). Subgenital plate with median rectangular incision on posterior margin and lateral edges since sheathing central knob-like structure ( Fig. 37 C, D View FIGURE 37 ).
Nymph. Similar to adult, L4 nymphs were successfully reared to adults ( Fig. 38 View FIGURE 38 ).
Measurements, males (mm) (N=1). Total length of body (including cerci): 27; median length of pronotum 15; length of hind femur 15.5; length of tegmina 20.
Measurements, females (mm) (N=4). Total length of body 24.6–30.2; Median length of pronotum 11.2–12.1; Length of hind femur 16.5–17.7; Length of elytra 21.2–23.2; Length of ovipositor 14.1–16.8.
Song. As in the other species of Dendrobia , the male sang very rarely. The song was clearly audible with the human ear. It produced often only one group of echemes per day (continously monitored). These sounds were registered in the late afternoon or in the morning. The echemes had a mean duration of 1.4 s, distinctly longer than in the other two species (see Fig. 41 View FIGURE 41 ) and period of 2.2 seconds (n=5/7) with a SRR of about 19 Hz. The peak of the carrier frequency was with about 7 kHz even slightly lower than in the other Dendrobia species. See Fig. 41 View FIGURE 41 , 42 View FIGURE 42 and Table 1 View TABLE 1 for details.
Diagnosis. D. plagata n. sp. is characterized by its net-like pattern on the tegmina, both in the male and the known females compared to D. amaniensis Hemp & Ingrisch, 2017 from the East Usambara Mountains and D. octopunctata Hemp, 2017 from the Udzungwa Mountains being of more uniform green colour. The median reddish stripe is more conspicuous red and broad in D. plagata n. sp. compared to the other two species. The male cerci are vertically flattened and thus very different from the bulbous cerci of D. octopunctata ( Fig. 36 C View FIGURE 36 ) but similar to the genitalic apparatus found in D. amaniensis ( Fig. 36 A View FIGURE 36 ). The latter species also has vertically flattened male cerci but the branches are differently shaped (compare Fig 36 A and B View FIGURE 36 ). D. plagata n. sp. has an inner branch of the male cerci up-lifted while the male cerci in D. amaniensis are more flattened and shovel-like expanded but the inner tips of the cerci are not or only very slightly up-lifted.
The females of all three known species have a similar subgenital plate with a central knob-like structure on the ovipositor sheathed by the subgenital plate ( Fig. 37 View FIGURE 37 A–D). Differences are found in the size of the median incision and the lateral processes caused by the central knob-like structure. However, females are best identified with associate males and their area of occurrence since all three species are restricted to single mountain ranges of the Eastern Arc chain.
Biology. Dweller of the tree canopy. Probably predaceous, in captivity feeding on fruit, cereals and insect parts.
Habitat. Submontane to montane forest.
Distribution. Tanzania, Nguru Mountains.
Etymology. From Latin:— plaga, net because of the net-like pattern on the tegmina.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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