Metriogryllacris (Metriogryllacris) permodesta ( Griffini, 1914b )
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https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4510.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EAA35595-0972-4CF8-A128-16267A59112B |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5987293 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/53599456-978D-FF5A-FF75-FC59FE9DBDAA |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Metriogryllacris (Metriogryllacris) permodesta ( Griffini, 1914b ) |
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Metriogryllacris (Metriogryllacris) permodesta ( Griffini, 1914b) View in CoL
Figs. 76 View FIGURE 76 F–G, 77D–H
Material examined. Holotype (female): Vietnam: Tonkin [North Vietnam], Montes Mauson , elev. 610–915 m (21°49'N, 106°57'E), 1.iv.–31.v.1892, leg. H. Fruhstorfer—(Wien NHMW). GoogleMaps
Other specimens studied. China: Guangdong, "North-Kuangtung", about 1910, leg. R. Mell— 1 male (Berlin ZMB); Canton [= Guangzhou], (23°6'N, 113°16'E), 25.vii.1910, leg. R. Mell— 1 female (Berlin ZMB) GoogleMaps ; China: Chekiang , 8,4,1939— 1 male (Wien NHMW) .
Description. Small species. Head: Face ovoid; forehead nearly smooth with scattered impressed dots; fastigium verticis distinctly wider than scapus, separated by a transverse furrow from fastigium frontis; ocelli indistinct; subocular furrow short and shallow ( Fig. 76F View FIGURE 76 ). Wings in female not reaching tip of abdomen; in male little surpassing tip of abdomen and hind knees ( Fig. 76G View FIGURE 76 ). Tegmen: ♀ + ♂: Radius releases RS before apical quarter of tegmen, both without apical branches; ♀ + ♂: Media free at base but fused with R in subbasal area for about one (or ♀ less than one) cell length, otherwise free, undivided; ♂: MP absent or fully fused with CuA— ♀: MP arises at about end of basal third with a dividing vein from both MA and CuA; ♂: Cubitus anterior and cubitus posterior both single branched, free throughout—in ♀: CuA with division branch to MP; CuP free; with ♂ 3; ♀ 4 anal veins.
Coloration. General color yellowish brown. Face uniformly yellowish brown. Tegmen yellowish brown; hind wing semi-transparent white.
Male. Eighth abdominal tergite prolonged, black. Ninth abdominal tergite globular, black; hind margin yellowish, with two small short lobes on both sides of middle, in between concavely excised and provided with a pair of hook-like spines ( Figs. 77 View FIGURE 77 D–E). Subgenital plate little wider than long, with basal transverse groove and upcurved, distinctly convex lateral margin; at insertion of short, subapical styli constricted, and in middle with a short apical lobe with wide truncate tip ( Fig. 77F View FIGURE 77 ). See also description and images in Karny (1926b).
Female. Seventh abdominal sternite and subgenital plate together forming a unit of largely membranous surface; in middle of more than basal half with a sclerotised area with convexly converging lateral margins increasingly rising over surrounding surface posteriorly (seventh sternite), at tip divided into a pair of triangular extensions, excised in between; it follows a membranous zone into which at apex a pair of weakly sclerotised transverse plates (subgenital plate) are included that are separated by a narrow membranous zone and form together a convex apical margin ( Figs. 77 View FIGURE 77 G–H). Ovipositor short, straight; tip rounded.
Measurements after Griffini (1914b) (1 female).—body w/o wings: 19; pronotum: 4; tegmen: 12; hind femur: 9.4; ovipositor: female 4.9 mm.
Discussion. Seventh abdominal sternite plus subgenital plate of the female holotype agree with the drawings in Gorochov (2003) although the recurved hook is somewhat more delicate in the holotype than in Gorochov's (2003) drawing. The species was originally described by Griffini (1914b) on a single female from Montes Mauson near the northeastern border to China. Males were later described by Karny (1925b, 1926b) from South China (Kwangtung). These males and another male from Chekiang in the former Karny collection in NHMW have the projections of the ninth tergite very similar to the situation in M. tamdao Gorochov, 2003 , especially the male from Chekiang. The latter species was recently reported from South China by Di et al. (2014). However, the subgenital plate of the female from Guangzhou identified by Karny is more similar to that of the type of M. permodesta ( Figs. 77 View FIGURE 77 G–H) than to that of M. tamdao illustrated in Gorochov (2003), although they are not fully identical. The differences between both taxa thus need to become more specifically worked-out before a clear differentiation becomes possible.
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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Stenopelmatoidea |
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