Chorthippus dichrous (Eversmann, 1859)

Tishechkin, Dmitri Yu., 2017, Contributions to the study of gomphocerine grasshoppers calling songs (Orthoptera: Acrididae: Gomphocerinae) with notes on taxonomic status and distribution of some forms from Kyrgyzstan, Zootaxa 4318 (3), pp. 531-547 : 544-545

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4318.3.6

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A9Ee2696-C9A3-4C19-984D-Bbf44129C7C9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6002064

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BF2187E3-FFA5-484D-FF06-499DFC3CE4E7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Chorthippus dichrous (Eversmann, 1859)
status

 

9. Chorthippus dichrous (Eversmann, 1859)

Figs. 86–90 View FIGURES 86 – 95

Distribution. Southeastern part of Europe, including Southern part of European Russia, the Caucasus, Transcaucasia, Iran, South Kazakhstan, Central Asia, steppe regions of Western Siberia, Mongolia.

Locality. 7. Southern shore of the Issyk-Kul’ (Ysyk Köl) Lake, meadows in the mouth of the Tossor River (17 km East of Kaji Say ), 16. VII. 2013. Signals of 1 ♂ recorded on disk at 34o C.

References to song. Ragge & Reynolds (1998): recordings from Western Europe ; Vedenina & Bukhvalova (2001): recordings from several localities in the Ukraine, Rostov Oblast, Volgograd Oblast, and the South Urals ; Savitsky & Lekarev (2007): recordings from the Lower Volga Region and Western Kazakhstan (Janybek, ca. 5 km from the Russia border); Savitsky (2009): recordings from Western Kazakhstan (Janybek, ca. 5 km from the Russia border).

Song. Male calling song consists of short echemes lasting 500–850 ms. Usually male produce from 2–3 to 10– 12 echemes with a period of 2–3 s ( Fig. 86 View FIGURES 86 – 95 ). Inner structure of an echeme is indistinct, there are several gaps only at its beginning ( Figs. 87–90 View FIGURES 86 – 95 ).

Comparative notes. Our recordings of the calling song are similar to these from Europe and the South Urals. Ragge & Reynolds (1998) believe that distribution of this species in Central Asia needs to be confirmed by song studies. Our data indicate that this species actually occurs in this region.

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