New genera, species and records of Phaneropterinae (Orthoptera, Phaneropteridae) from sub-Saharan Africa
Author
Massa, Bruno
text
ZooKeys
2015
472
77
102
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.472.8575
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.472.8575
1313-2970-472-77
9B737D7BBDA24049B562A68052317B02
9B737D7BBDA24049B562A68052317B02
Taxon classification Animalia Orthoptera Phaneropteridae
Atlasacris brevipennis
sp. n.
Figs 41, 42, 46, 47, 52
Material examined and depository.
NW Tanganyika (now Tanzania) 1910 (♂ holotype), Grauer (MfN).
General habitus and colour.
Antennae reddish, green on the face, pronotum and apical parts of tegmina; also femora are green, but their apex is reddish; tibiae are green with apex and base reddish, tarsi are reddish; fore area of tegmina brown, their fore borders cream; abdomen yellow.
Description.
Male. Head and antennae: head long, eyes round, prominent. Fastigium of vertex compressed, narrower than the first antennal segment, sulcate above, a small concave in lateral view. Thorax: pronotum without carinae, undulated and selliform, with inflated posterior lateral and hind parts, anterior margin rounded, posterior margin undulate and inflated (Figs 41, 46-47). Legs: the spine on fore coxae is not present, fore tibiae have 3 spines on the outer ventral margin plus apical spur, 2 spines on outer upper margin plus apical spur, and only apical spur on upper inner margin; femora are unarmed. Tympana of fore tibiae are open. Mid tibiae end with a long inner spur and the first tarsal segment is longer than the other ones and shows a long concavity, where the long spur may be hidden (Fig. 42). Tegmina are reduced, just surpassing the 1st abdominal segment, overlapping for most of their median length (Fig. 46). Alae present, but concealed below tegmina. The stridulatory file corresponds to that described by
Hemp et al. (2009)
for
Monticolaria
Sjoestedt
, 1909; it consists of about 50 teeth. The proximal part contains more teeth (about 35) than the much longer distal part which bears around 20 large, asymmetrical and widely spaced teeth. The right tegmen has a wide triangular speculum that covers ca.
3/4
of the tegmen length. Abdomen: tenth tergite enlarged, with a wide concavity and two postero-lateral pointed and up-curved tips (Figs 49-50); the sub-genital plate is long and has apically a v-shaped concavity. Styli are absent, but two small protrusions are present on the lateral tips of the sub-genital plate (Fig. 52). Cerci are stout, in-curved and with an apical in-curved pointed tip.
Figures 45-48. Genus
Atlasacris
. Dorsal view of the female of
Atlasacris
sp. from the Democratic Republic of Congo (45), and of the male of
Atlasacris brevipennis
sp. n. (46); lateral view of head, pronotum and tegmina of the male of
Atlasacris brevipennis
sp. n. (47); lateral view of the female of
Atlasacris
sp. (48).
Figures 49-58.
Atlasacris
and
Arostratum
gen. n. Lateral (49) and dorsal (50) view of last abdominal segments and cerci of
Atlasacris brevipennis
sp. n.; dorsal view (51) of last abdominal segments of
Atlasacris peculiaris
; sub-genital plate of
Atlasacris brevipennis
sp. n. (52),
Atlasacris peculiaris
(53) and
Arostratum oblitum
gen. n., sp. n. (54); lateral (55) and dorsal view (56) of last abdominal segments of
Arostratum oblitum
gen. n., sp. n.; dorsal (57) and lateral (58) view of head, pronotum and tegmina of
Arostratum oblitum
gen. n., sp. n.
Female. Unknown.
Measurements.
Body length: 16.2; pronotum length: 4.0; fore femur: 7.2; mid femur: 7.4; hind femur: 18.7; tegmina: 3.4.
Etymology.
From Latin: brevis = short, pennis = feather, because of its reduced tegminal lobes.
Diagnosis.
Atlasacris brevipennis
is smaller than
Atlasacris peculiaris
(body length 16.2 vs 17-19.5; pronotum length 4.0 vs 4.6-5.2; tegmina: 4.0 vs 5.2-5.5; hind femora: 18.7 vs 19.5-21.5) and the shape of tegmina is clearly different (Figs 39, 41, 46, 47); speculum of
Atlasacris peculiaris
covers ca. half the length of right tegmen. Tenth tergite, cerci and sub-genital plate of
Atlasacris peculiaris
(Figs 51, 53) are very similar to those of
Atlasacris brevipennis
sp. n.
Distribution.
Atlasacris brevipennis
sp. n. is known only from the type locality: NW Tanzania.