Orthoptera (Insecta: Tettigonioidea, Pyrgomorphoidea, Acridoidea) of Kafa Biosphere Reserve, Bale Mountains National Park and other areas of conservation interest in Ethiopia
Author
Felix, Rob P. W. H.
Author
Massa, Bruno
text
Zootaxa
2016
4189
1
1
59
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4189.1.1
2f313cb8-d57b-43ac-a1d5-f6cefc2c1ce2
1175-5326
165634
3C3C1242-82BC-4C73-B95E-0232F9603BA4
Rastafaria abessinica
Ramme, 1931
http://lsid.speciesfile.org/urn:lsid:
Orthoptera
.speciesfile.org:TaxonName:51183
Figure 42
Material
examined
.
ETHIOPIA
:
Gambella
,
Godere
, Baku
Lake
(
1425 m
),
16.IV.2015
,
R.P.W.H. Felix
(1Ƌ,
RFPC
)
;
SNNPR
,
Bench Maji
,
Dembi Forest
(
1260 m
),
14.IV.2015
,
R.P.W.H. Felix
(4Ƌ,
1♀
,
RFPC
),
B. Massa
(6Ƌ,
BMPC
)
;
Bench Maji
,
Sheko Forest
(
1570 m
),
13.IV.2015
,
R.P.W.H. Felix
(1Ƌ,
RFPC
),
B. Massa
(3Ƌ,
BMPC
)
.
Habitat.
Our specimens were collected in high grass and dense shrub along wet forest edges (
Figure 2
a, 4b).
Remarks.
Jago (1983) recognizes two related groups, one of which is the
Parga
-group: lophi of epiphallus forming slender hook-like structures, posterior lateral lobes of epiphallus produced into slender, discrete, angular points, and specialized elongation of the inner and outer dorsal lobes of the knees of hind femora.
Rastafaria
lies within this
Parga
-group, which is heterogeneous in Africa and contains small genera, which are often monotypic, and largely composed of species living in or around forests, each with a small distributional area, suggesting that they are evolutionary relics of long past climatic patterns. Many of the genera are unique to the Ethiopian region (Jago 1983).