Taxonomy of the katydids (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae) from East Asia and adjacent islands. Communication 14
Author
Gorochov, A. V.
text
Far Eastern Entomologist
2021
2021-07-02
434
1
25
http://dx.doi.org/10.25221/fee.434.1
journal article
10.25221/fee.434.1
2713-2196
7165976
2A2352F6-0505-4F83-9040-56E8D5560D6E
Lipotactes
(
Lipotactes
)
virescens
Ingrisch, 1995
Figs 17, 18
,
82–84
MATERIAL.
Malay Peninsula
:
1 ♂
,
1 ♀
,
Thailand
,
Surat Thani Prov.
, ~
40 km
WSW of Phanom Town, environs of Khao Sok National Park, forest, 20–29.VII
1996,
A. Gorochov
;
1 ♂
,
1 ♀
,
Malaysia
,
Pahang State
,
Taman Negara National Park
a. similajau
subsp. n.; 34, 35 –
L.
(
L.
)
a. kubah
subsp. n.; 36–39 –
L.
(
L.
)
sumatranus
sp. n
.;
Figs 26–40.
Lipotactes
spp.
: 26–29 –
L. (Lipotactes) alienus lambir
subsp. n.; 30–33 –
L.
(
L
.)
40 –
L.
(
L.
)
a.
alienus
?
Br.-W. with its hind leg shown separately under rest of body. Body of male (26, 27, 30, 31, 34–37) and of female (28, 29, 32, 33, 38–40) from above or from side.
on Tembeling River, ~
100 m
, primary forest,
28.XI–5.XII 2014
, A. Gorochov, M.
Berezin, E.
Tkatsheva.
Indonesia
:
3 ♂
,
1 ♀
,
Sumatra
I.,
West Sumatra Prov.
, ~20
km E of Sasak Town, environs of Harau Valley National Park, equator, ~
600 m
,
24–26.XI 1999
, A. Gorochov.
NOTE
. These specimens are very similar to each other and to the original description (Ingrisch, 1995). The males and females from Malay Peninsula are almost identical to the
types
of this species (from
Thailand
) in the body coloration (including that of the hind femur proximal half, which is almost completely light brown in male and with a dark longitudinal outer stripe in female) and in the presence of a very short but distinct additional tubercle on the basal part of the male cercus (
Fig.
17); however, the male from
Malaysia
has the left tegmen with a somewhat wider membranous area between its mirror and lateral field as well as with a shorter and wider apical area (
Fig. 83
). All the males from Sumatra have the left tegmen almost as in my Thailandian male (
Figs 82 and 84
), but their cercus is with the abovementioned additional tubercle almost indistinct (
Fig. 18
), and the hind femur of my
Sumatran female is without any dark stripe on its proximal half. These differences allow me to propose that my specimens may belong to two or three subspecies;
however, I have only
one male
from each of the localities in Malay Peninsula and
one female
from
Sumatra
, i.e. this material is insufficient for such decision
.