Oxyartes cresphontes (Westwood, 1859)

Gao, Hao-Ran, Wang, Chen & Zhang, Hong-Rui, 2024, A remarkable new species and one newly recorded species of genus Oxyartes Stål, 1875 (Phasmida, Lonchodidae, Necrosciinae) from China, Zootaxa 5419 (3), pp. 419-429 : 422

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5419.3.6

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C0AE7092-4387-41B9-BE6D-9C1FF19E5DCD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10791846

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD5A22-E34E-5212-FF47-FC6ACD54F86F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Oxyartes cresphontes (Westwood, 1859)
status

 

Oxyartes cresphontes (Westwood, 1859) View in CoL

( Figs. 3–4 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 )

Anophelepis cresphontes Westwood, 1859: 68 , pl. 3 [regarded as O. despecta ].

Oxyartes cresphontes Redtenbacher, 1908: 475 View in CoL [as a valid species]; Otte & Brock, 2005: 242 [Catalogue]; Mandal & Yadav, 2010: 12 [male]; Brock et al., 2016: 166 View Cited Treatment [type data]; Singh et al., 2021: 229 [Checklist]; Brock & Büscher, 2022: 540 [Catalogue].

Diagnosis. Westwood (1859) first described O. cresphontes as a variety of small O. despectus ( Westwood, 1848) and stated that the major differences are tubercles, spines and the scale-like wings pale yellow with a black margin on each side. Fortunately, this color pattern on the wings of O. cresphontes was shown in a drwing (Westwood 1859). In all the pictures of O. despectus (including two subspecies), it will be seen that O. despectus does not have such a wing coloration pattern. This is especially clear in the colorful plates by Westwood (1848) and photos on Phasmida Species File (PSF) ( Brock et al. 2023). Combining previous descriptions of spines or tubercles on the mesonotum of O. cresphontes , there are 2 tubercles on the anterior and posterior of mesonotum, but such a feature can also be found in O. despectus ( Brock et al. 2023, Mandal & Yadav 2010, Redtenbacher 1908, Westwood 1848, 1859). Our specimen has only one pair of strong spines near the anterior margin, and posterior of mesonotum with a pair of indistinct and tiny tubercles, This is different from what is known in both species ( Fig3 A–C, G View FIGURE 3 ).

By checking the photos of the holotype of O. despectus despectus ( Westwood, 1848) on the PSF ( Brock et al. 2023), and plates drawn by Retdenbacher (1908), our specimen can be separated by the fifth abdominal tergite of O. despectus despectus with a relatively large hump as well. Both O. cresphontes and O. despectus despectus are distributed over a wide area in the southern foothills of the Himalayas ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ), but O. cresphontes is closer to Mêdog County (specimen locality). Combining geographic distribution, wing color patterns (Fig, 3A, C), we hereby consider the specimen we found to be O. cresphontes .

Materials. 1♀, China, XizangAutonomous Region , Nyingchi City , Mêdog County, Mêdog Town, 29°19′36.79″N, 95°19′16.99″E, 1008m, 6-VII-2023, leg. Zhi-Sheng Zhang, Lu-Yu Wang, Qian-Le Lu & Xu-Long Chen ( YNAU) GoogleMaps .

Remarks. First record this species from China.

Distribution. China (Xizang: Mêdog); India (Assam, Meghalaya, Sikkim).

Suggested common name (Chinese). 克氏ṉ异DZ.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Phasmida

Family

Lonchodidae

SubFamily

Necrosciinae

Tribe

Necrosciini

Genus

Oxyartes

Loc

Oxyartes cresphontes (Westwood, 1859)

Gao, Hao-Ran, Wang, Chen & Zhang, Hong-Rui 2024
2024
Loc

Oxyartes cresphontes

Brock, P. D. & Buscher, T. 2022: 540
Singh, L. R. K. & Chandra, K. & Gupta, D. 2021: 229
Brock, P. D. & Marshall, J. A. & Beccaloni, G. W. & Harman, A. J. E. 2016: 166
Mandal, S. K. & Yadav, K. 2010: 12
Otte, D. & Brock, P. D. 2005: 242
Redtenbacher, J. 1908: 475
1908
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