A revision of the shield-back katydid genus Neduba (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Tettigoniinae: Nedubini)
Author
Cole, Jeffrey A.
jacole@pasadena.edu
Author
Weissman, David B.
gryllus@gmail.com
Author
Lightfoot, David C.
dlightfo@unm.edu
Author
Ueshima, Norihiro
nori-ue@ma.mctv.ne.jp
Author
Warchałowska-Śliwa, Elżbieta
warchalowska@isez.pan.krakow.pl
Author
Maryańska-Nadachowska, Anna
maryanska@isez.pan.krakow.pl
Author
Chatfield-Taylor, Will
jacole@pasadena.edu
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-01-19
4910
1
1
92
journal article
8666
10.11646/zootaxa.4910.1.1
6de1cf29-59a5-4805-8d91-d9bf5bea4f63
1175-5326
4448800
69A0204C-15B4-4566-AA27-E3817087130A
Neduba lucubrata
Cole, Weissman, & Lightfoot
,
sp. n.
Fig. 19
(distribution),
Fig. 23
(male and female habitus, calling song, drumming, male and female terminalia, karyotype),
Plate 2E
(live habitus),
Plate 5C
(male calling song),
Plate 7
G–H (male ventral sclerites),
Plate 10D
(male titillators),
Plate 12A
(female subgenital plate).
Common name.
Midnight Shieldback.
History of recognition.
None.
Type material.
HOLOTYPE
MALE
,
USA
,
CA
,
Monterey Co.
,
Miller’s Lodge
,
0.6 miles
west jct.
Arroyo Seco Road
and G16,
36.25466N
,
121.43208W
,
192 m
,
22-VII-2015
,
JA Cole
,
DB Weissman
,
JAC000002197
[specimen barcode], DNA161 [tissue], SING0503 [DNA extraction],
JCT15-08
[karyotope], genitalia in vial under specimen, deposited in
CAS
,
Entomology
type #19712.
PARATYPES
(n = 32):
All
USA
,
CA
,
Monterey Co.
,
4♁,
1♀
, same data as holotype,
LACM
;
2♁,
1♀
, Arroyo
Seco Rd.
,
0.6 mi.
W of intersection with G16,
36.235139N
,
121.473392W
,
274 m
,
29-VII-1983
,
DB Weissman
,
CAS
;
3♁,
Bottcher’s Gap
,
Los Padres National Forest
,
19 miles
north of
Big Sur
off SR1 on
Palo
Colorado
Road
,
36.355N
,
121.8138W
,
652 m
,
20-21-VIII-2012
,
JA Cole
,
LACM
;
1♁, same data except
7-8-IX-2002
,
JA Cole
,
LACM
;
7♁,
Nacimiento-Ferguson Rd.
, at bridge of
Nacimiento River
,
8.4 miles
east of SR1,
36.0135N
,
121.4216W
,
587 m
,
19-20-VIII-2012
,
JA Cole
,
LACM
;
San Benito Co.
,
9♁,
Short Fence Trailhead
,
Coalinga Road
,
Laguna Mountain Recreation Area
, BLM,
36.36403N
,
120.8784W
,
670 m
,
10-11-VIII-2017
,
JA Cole
,
LACM
;
2♁, same data except
10-11-VIII-2017
,
JA Cole
,
JAC
;
2♁,
Upper Sweetwater Campground
,
Coalinga Road
,
Laguna Mountain Recreation Area
, BLM,
36.36067N
,
120.85256W
,
848 m
,
10-11-VIII-2017
,
JA Cole
,
LACM
.
Measurements.
(mm, ♁n = 24,
♀
n = 2) Hind femur ♁16.35–20.74,
♀
21.61–22.90, pronotum total length ♁7.04–9.03,
♀
8.95–9.17, prozona length ♁2.65–4.78,
♀
4.02–4.18, metazona dorsal length ♁3.85–5.10,
♀
4.77– 5.15, pronotum constriction width ♁1.85–2.66,
♀
2.70–3.35, metazona dorsal width ♁5.36–6.25,
♀
5.76–6.35, head width ♁3.90–4.70,
♀
5.11–5.46, ovipositor length
♀
16.50–16.60.
Distribution.
Santa Lucia
and Diablo Ranges in the South Coast Range, California.
Habitat.
Mixed woodland and chaparral. Taken from twigs in tangles, poison oak, and
California
sage (
Artemisia californica
Less.
). Males call approximately
1 m
above ground level in thick tangles. At dusk two males and one female emerged for nocturnal activity from a pack rat nest, suggesting that this structure served as a daytime shelter for an aggregation of individuals. These individuals retreated into the nest when disturbed.
Seasonal occurrence.
Adults
from late
July
(
22-VII-2015
,
JA Cole
and
DB Weissman
, LACM) through early September (
8-IX-2002
,
JA Cole
, LACM).
Stridulatory file.
(n = 7) length
3.2–3.8 mm
, 121–186 teeth, tooth density 45.9 ± 4.2 (38.4–50.0) teeth/mm.
Song.
(n = 31)
Brief bouts separated by long intervals between bouts.
PTR
is 4.0 ± 0.5
s-
1.
Males
may add one PT to each successive bout, for example three successive bouts may consist of 3 PT, 4 PT, then 5 PT, and then the cycle recommences at 3 PT.
PTF
is 14.9 ± 0.8 kHz.
Males
may accompany stridulation with audible drumming, which is generated by the abdomen striking the substrate (
Weissman 2001
;
JAC
pers. obs.).
Drumming
coincides with partial PT at the beginning of a bout (
Fig. 23
).
Drumming
does not occur frequently and may not occur in all populations.
Drumming
was observed at the
Monterey County
localities of
Arroyo Seco
(one of two males,
DBW
,
JAC
, pers. obs.) and
Bottcher’s Gap
(
JAC
, pers. obs.), but not at any
San Benito County
localities
.
Karyotype.
(n = 8) Unique. 2n♁ = 24 (
2m
+
20t
+ XtYt). T83-37, S83-107, paratopotype.
Recognition.
With a single apical protibial spine, dark apical tegminal spots and prosternal spines, this species may be confused only with
N. propsti
, a larger species that does not occur on the
California
mainland. The female subgenital plate length and width are subequal, in contrast with the elongated subgenital plate of
N. propsti
. The song, which consists of short stridulation bouts accompanied by drumming, is unique.
Etymology.
l.
lucubrata
burning the midnight oil, descriptive of male acoustic activity continuing throughout the night.
Notes.
This species shares morphological and genitalic characteristics with
N. propsti
as well as with the species of the Sierranus and Castanea Groups.
Santa Lucia
Range and Diablo Range populations are genetically distinct (
Figs. 3–5
) but are separable neither morphologically nor bioacoustically. The chirping song structure combined with abdominal drumming makes
N. lucubrata
the most acoustically distinct species of
Neduba
. Selection for mate recognition may have driven the evolution of distinctive song phrasing in
N. lucubrata
, as within its distribution are found two sympatric nedubines:
N. carinata
and a small
Aglaothorax
species. Females may require silent periods of an appropriate intermediate length between bouts to recognize a conspecific male signal (Cole 2016): intermediate length gaps between PT bouts will contrast with the continuous PT production of sympatric
N. carinata
as well and the long periods of silence between pulse production in
Aglaothorax
.
FIGURE 23.
N. lucubrata
male and female habitus, calling song, male and female terminalia, karyotype.
Material examined.
Type
series only. See
Type
material above.
Sierranus Group
The Sierranus Group is composed of 3 species (
sierranus
,
arborea
, and
radocantans
). Like the
Sequoia
Group, all Sierranus Group species have a single spine on the posterior margin of the forefemur, a pair of prosternal spines, and the entire male tegmen ivory or white. The male subgenital plate has lateral carinae that converge to the apex, which is devoid of styli, petal-like and often reflexed. The stridulatory file tooth density is the highest of all
Neduba
species groups (59–77 teeth/mm), and this character alone separates it from all
Sequoia
Group species except
N. inversa
. The Sierranus Group is distributed in the central and northern Sierra
Nevada
while the
Sequoia
Group occupies the southern portions of that mountain range (
Figs. 8
,
19
). Within this Group are morphologically cryptic species defined by song and/or karyotype. Body part measurements and stridulatory files offer the only means to identify males that lack song data. Females may also be identified by body part measurements and sometimes the shape of the subgenital plate. Species are parapatric in the Sierra
Nevada
(
Fig. 19
) and thus geography will serve to narrow species possibilities. Molecular data show hybridization (
Fig. 4
) between species with adjacent ranges.