Cardiodactylus floresiensis Robillard, 2014

Robillard, Tony, Gorochov, Andrej V., Poulain, Simon & Suhardjono, Yayuk R., 2014, Revision of the cricket genus Cardiodactylus (Orthoptera, Eneopterinae, Lebinthini): the species from both sides of the Wallace line, with description of 25 new species, Zootaxa 3854 (1), pp. 1-104 : 36-40

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3854.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7F874BB5-91EB-41CC-A039-E98E7B53F47C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5217557

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E687D6-5B62-DE17-FF10-ED8EA5BBFCEC

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Cardiodactylus floresiensis Robillard
status

sp. nov.

Cardiodactylus floresiensis Robillard , n. sp.

( Figs 4 View FIGURE 4 , 5F View FIGURE 5 , 9D View FIGURE 9 , 11D View FIGURE 11 , 13D View FIGURE 13 , 14D View FIGURE 14 , 21 View FIGURE 21 , 22 View FIGURE 22 , 23 View FIGURE 23 )

Type material. Male holotype: Indonesia. East Nusa Tenggara Province, Flores, Ruteng district, Danau Ranamese Recreation Park , bord E du lac (GPS Flo 3-4), 08°38'22.1"S 120°33'47.6"E, 1225 m, 22.VI.2010, nuit, sur plante basse, adulte en élevage, enregistrement appel, T. Robillard ( MZB) GoogleMaps . Female allotype: same information as HT ( MZB) . Paratypes (3♂): Indonesia. East Nusa Tenggara Province, Flores, Ruteng district, Danau Ranamese Recreation Park, bord E du lac (GPS Flo 3-4), 08°38'22.1"S, 120°33'47.6"E, 1225 m, 22.VI.2010, nuit, sur plante basse, adulte en élevage, T. Robillard: 1♂ ( MZB) GoogleMaps ; 2♂, enregistrement appel (MNHN-EO-ENSIF3516- 3517).

Type locality. Indonesia, Flores, Ruteng district , Danau Ranamese Recreation Park .

Other material examined. Indonesia. East Nusa Tenggara Province, Flores, Ruteng district, Danau Ranamese Recreation Park , bord E du lac (GPS Flo 3-4), 08°38'22.1"S 120°33'47.6"E, 1225 m, 22.VI.2010, nuit, T. Robillard GoogleMaps : 1♀, adulte en élevage ( MNHN) ; 1 juvenile (TR344), sur plante basse ( MZB) ; 1 juvenile (TR345), sur plante basse ( MNHN) .

Etymology. Named after the type locality.

Distribution. Indonesia, west of Flores Island.

Diagnosis. Species of average to small size, general coloration brownish with yellow patterns. Characterized by male genitalia close to C. muria , with dorsal ridges slightly asymmetrical, carinated innerly and externally.

Description. Average to small size for the species group. General coloration yellow brown ( Fig. 21A–D View FIGURE 21 ). Head dorsum yellow brown with 4 brown bands including 2 complete lateral ones fused to the dark brown fastigium without a clear anterior notch, and 2 median punctuated bands; areas posterior to eyes yellow brown with 2 brown triangles ( Fig. 5F View FIGURE 5 ). Scapes yellow brown, with a faint brown transverse band; rest of antennae orange brown. Front part of fastigium yellow brown 2 dark brown stripes extended below antennae. Face yellow brown, with a transverse yellow band extended bellow eyes. Lateral side of head variable, mostly gray brown mottled with dark brown. Mouthparts yellow brown more or less mottled with brown. Maxillary palpi yellow brown, apex dark brown. Pronotum: Dorsal disk almost completely yellow brown, more or less mottled with brown; posterior edge dark brown. Lateral lobes mostly brown, ventral quarter yellowish. Legs I–II yellow brown, femora with faint orange brown spots and tibiae with rings. FIII homogeneously orange brown, knees dark brown. TIII dark brown, with faint yellow brown rings. Tarsomeres III-1 orange brown, their ends darker. Hind wing tail dark brown. Cerci yellow brown with faint dark brown rings, their bases dark brown. Abdomen mostly orange brown to dark brown. Subgenital plate yellow brown.

Male: FW coloration dark brown with yellow areas ( Fig. 9D View FIGURE 9 ) including bases of anal veins and anterior half of CuA, angle of 1A, harp veins, chords and a wide transverse band posterior to mirror. Black coloration on cell e1 and area between bases of 1A/2A and transverse part of 1A. Diagonal vein orange brown. Apex of apical field grayish. M/R/Sc area orange brown; M dark brown; R and Sc orange brown, apex of Sc whitish; M/R posterior junction yellow. Sc projections and more ventral veins of lateral field yellow. FW venation ( Fig. 9D View FIGURE 9 ): 1A clearly bisinuated. Stridulatory file with about 181 teeth (n = 1) on the transverse and angle parts of 1A, and 14 more teeth on a bump near base of 1A ( Table 4 View TABLE 4 ). CuP absent. Harp with 2 w-shaped veins. Mirror area: mirror (d1) distinct, longer than wide, separated at 2/3 by a transverse vein; d2 as wide as mirror, made of 1 main cell. Cell e1 not crossed by transverse veins. Apical field with 4 cell alignments posterior to mirror (n = 3). Lateral field with 7 projections of Sc (n = 3) and 4–5 ventral veins (m = 4, n = 3).

Male genitalia ( Fig. 21E–G View FIGURE 21 ): Pseudepiphallus shaped as a wide gutter. Dorsal ridges divergent posteriorly, slightly asymmetrical in shape, with a postero-inner carination and a medio-outer one. Pseudepiphallic sclerite with long anterior expansions, blade-like, close in shape to the hook observed in C. rizali , the membrane between them with long setae. Posterior pseudepiphallic apex rounded, with a large square translucent area. Rami with short apical stems oriented anteriorly. Ectophallic arc complete, without posterior expansion. Ectophallic fold with lateral sclerites; apex trilobate, membranous, median lobe oval, smaller than lateral ones. Endophallic sclerite short its apodeme with a dorsal crest and narrow lateral lamellas. Membrane of endophallic cavity not clearly plicate.

Female: FW coloration mostly dark brown, their base yellow brown, including bases of anal veins, and anterior half of CuA and M. Dark brown to black area including part of CuP and 1A posterior to yellow basis. R/Sc area and veins orange brown, apex of Sc whitish. Sc projections and more ventral veins yellow brown, the cells between them orange brown. FW venation ( Fig. 11D View FIGURE 11 ): AT with 10 strong longitudinal veins on dorsal field; lateral field with 8 longitudinal veins including 5 projections of Sc and 3 more ventral veins. Ovipositor of average length, slightly shorter than FIII; apex with both dorsal and ventral edges denticulate ( Fig. 13D View FIGURE 13 ).

Female genitalia ( Fig. 14D View FIGURE 14 ): Copulatory papilla triangular, with baso-lateral sclerites; apex rounded and slightly sclerotized, folded ventrally.

Juvenile: Light brown, mottled with dark brown.

Measurements. See Table 4 View TABLE 4 .

Habitat and life history traits. Cardiodactylus floresiensis is a nocturnal species living in forested areas. Only juveniles were observed in the field in Flores, on low branches of bushes or small trees ( Fig. 22 View FIGURE 22 ).

Behavior. Calling song ( Fig. 23 View FIGURE 23 ): Cardiodactylus floresiensis has a mono-syllabic calling song. At 21°C, the calling songs show a very indented amplitude profile. Syllables have the following characteristics: syllable duration = 84.0 ± 3.6 ms; syllable period = 2.5 ± 0.1 s; syllable duty cycle = 3.4 %. The power spectrum shows a clear harmonic pattern; the dominant frequency is 15.43 ± 0.12 kHz and corresponds to the third frequency peak.

MZB

Museum Zoologicum Bogoriense

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

Family

Haglotettigoniidae

SubFamily

Eneopterinae

Tribe

Lebinthini

Genus

Cardiodactylus

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