Quesada gigas ( Olivier, 1790 )

Sanborn, Allen F., 2020, The cicadas (Hemiptera: Cicadidae) of Trinidad and Tobago including the description of three new species and seven new records, with new records for several additional Caribbean Islands, Zootaxa 4838 (4), pp. 535-565 : 544

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4838.4.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7EE05FE1-62C3-41AD-98D2-814FC1E43BA9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4477131

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/866187BC-5F29-FFFB-FF48-FCEBFBE337FD

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Quesada gigas ( Olivier, 1790 )
status

 

Quesada gigas ( Olivier, 1790) View in CoL View at ENA

Cicada gigas Olivier 1790: 750 View in CoL . (Java).

Cicada triupsilon Walker 1850: 103 View in CoL . (Unknown collection locality)

Cicada sonans Walker 1850: 104 View in CoL . (Unknown collection locality)

Cicada consonans Walker 1850: 106 View in CoL . (West Coast of America)

Cicada vibrans Walker 1850: 107 View in CoL . (Unknown collection locality)

Tympanoterpes sibilarix Berg 1879: 141 .

Remarks. The type locality of Java is a mistake. The species is found over most of the tropical and subtropical New World ( Sanborn & Heath 2014; 2017).

Quesada gigas is another of the large Trinidadian cicadas with body lengths up to 45 mm and wingspans of 120 mm having been reported ( Sanborn & Heath 2017). The head width across the eyes is narrower than pronotum and about as wide as the mesonotum, head distinctly triangular with anterior extension of postclypeus, lateral pronotum convergent anteriorly in dorsal view, lateral pronotal collar narrower laterally than dorsally, timbal covers recurve along posterior timbal cavity forming ribbon-like structure posterior to timbals with small triangular extension laterally exposing majority of timbal, male abdomen widest at segments 3 and 4, proximal wing venation ground color, and infuscation found only on the radial and radiomedial crossveins easily distinguish it from Majeorona aper . Fidicinoides descampsi can be distinguished by the stout body and the infuscation found along the ambient vein, distal apical cell veins, and connecting across all crossveins of the fore wings and hind wings. The song sounds like a steam whistle. Their ability to call at dusk is due to the endothermy exhibited by the species ( Sanborn et al. 1995). Davis (1944) reported emergence times for the species during February and March on Tobago.

Distribution. This species may have the most extensive north to south range of any cicada species. It has been reported from as far south as central Argentina, expanding across South and Central America with records from Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, French Guiana, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, the Antilles, the West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago, Uruguay, Venezuela, extending northward into the southern Texas in the United States ( Metcalf 1963a; Duffels & van der Laan 1985; Maccagnan & Martinelli 2011; Sanborn 2011b; 2013; 2014; 2018; 2019a; 2020b, d; Maccagnan et al. 2014; Monteiro et al. 2014; Sanborn & Heath 2014; Reis et al. 2015; Maccagnan et al. 2017; Oliveira et al. 2017). References for the species in Trinidad and or Tobago by Mathew (1875), Distant (1881a), Uhler (1892), Davis (1944), Maes (1998), Sanborn & Heath (2014), and Sanborn (2018) are provided with no specific locality information.

Material examined. “ Petit Valley / TRINIDAD / Station No. 1 / 10 June 1970 // T.E. Rogers /Coll.” one female ( FSCA); “ TRINIDAD / Talparo /V.24–VI.7.1990/ H.L. Dozier ” one male ( AFSC).

FSCA

USA, Florida, Gainesville, Division of Plant Industry, Florida State Collection of Arthropods

AFSC

AFSC

FSCA

Florida State Collection of Arthropods, The Museum of Entomology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Cicadidae

SubFamily

Cicadinae

Tribe

Fidicinini

SubTribe

Guyalnina

Genus

Quesada

Loc

Quesada gigas ( Olivier, 1790 )

Sanborn, Allen F. 2020
2020
Loc

Tympanoterpes sibilarix

Berg, C. 1879: 141
1879
Loc

Cicada triupsilon

Walker, F. 1850: 103
1850
Loc

Cicada sonans

Walker, F. 1850: 104
1850
Loc

Cicada consonans

Walker, F. 1850: 106
1850
Loc

Cicada vibrans

Walker, F. 1850: 107
1850
Loc

Cicada gigas

Olivier, G. A. 1790: 750
1790
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