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 radocantans
Cole, Weissman, & Lightfoot
,
sp. n.
Fig. 19
(distribution),
Fig. 26
(male and female habitus, calling song, male and female terminalia, karyotype),
Plate 3A
(live habitus),
Plate 5E
(male calling song),
Plate 8B
(male ventral sclerite),
Plate 10F
(male titillators),
Plate 12D
(female subgenital plate).
Common name.
Raspy Shieldback.
History of recognition.
None.
Type material.
HOLOTYPE
MALE
:
USA
,
CA
,
El Dorado Co.
,
Finnon Reservoir
,
5 mi.
NE Placerville
,
38.780862N
,
120.732843W
,
790 m
,
5-6-VIII-1995
,
DB Weissman, S
95-62 [stop],
R95-49
[recording],
T95-21
[testes], tegmen in gelcap and genitalia in vial below insect, deposited in
CAS
, Entomology type #19680.
PARATYPES
(n = 17):
USA
,
CA
,
El Dorado Co.
,
1♁,
2♀
, same data as holotype; 4♁,
2♀
,
Finnon Reservoir
,
5 mi.
NE Placerville
,
38.79978N
,
120.74947W
,
740 m
,
8-9-VIII-2014
,
JA Cole
,
DB Weissman
,
LACM
; 8♁,
US50
3.7 mi.
W Kyburz
,
38.76427N
,
120.35897W
,
1112 m
,
19-VII-2015
,
JA Cole
, DB
Weissman
,
LACM
.
Measurements.
(mm, ♁n = 12,
♀
n = 4) Hind femur ♁18.26–20.50,
♀
19.48–21.29, pronotum total length ♁7.96–9.70,
♀
7.85–8.85, prozona length ♁3.46–5.07,
♀
3.89–5.08, metazona dorsal length ♁3.92–5.50,
♀
3.32– 4.25, pronotum constriction width ♁2.20–2.63,
♀
2.35–2.80, metazona dorsal width ♁5.47–6.41,
♀
4.92–5.62, head width ♁4.40–4.75,
♀
4.60–5.23, ovipositor length
♀
13.45–18.05.
Habitat.
Oak woodland understory and riparian. In tangles, leaf litter, and bunch grass under oaks. This species inhabits mixed conifer forests at lower elevations than does
N. radicata
, but the two overlap at the extremes of their elevational distributions.
Seasonal occurrence.
Midsummer as indicated by scant records: July (
19-VII-2015
, JA Cole & DB Weissman, LACM) into August (
9-VIII-2014
, JA Cole, D.B. Weissman, LACM).
Distribution.
West slope of the Sierra
Nevada
in the vicinity of the American River watershed.
FIGURE 26.
N. radocantans
male and female habitus, calling song, male and female terminalia, karyotype.
Stridulatory file.
(n = 5) length
3.2–3.4 mm
, 200–250 teeth, tooth density 70.6 ± 5.5 (62.5–76.9) teeth/mm.
Song.
(n = 19) Unique in the high PTN of 19.9 ± 3.9 (two-way ANOVA,
P
= 1.93×10
-15
). The greater portion of airtime spent producing OPT makes the PTR slower (0.8 ±
0.3
s-
1, ANCOVA,
P
= 3.96×10
-9
) than that of other Sierranus Group species. PTF is 16.2 ± 1.2 kHz.
Karyotype.
(n = 6) Unique. 2n♁ = 22 (
2m
+
18t
+ XmYt), T95-20, S95-62, paratopotype.
Recognition.
Males have both a high stridulatory file tooth density (68–73 teeth/mm) and a strongly constricted pronotum. Male
N. sierranus
have a similar high tooth density but the pronotum constriction is weak.
N. inversa
is difficult to separate but tends to have a lower stridulatory file tooth density. Female hind femora are shorter than other Sierranus and
Sequoia
group species. The song has the slowest PTR and highest PTN of the Sierranus Group. The latter song feature is temperature-invariate and distinct to a human listener, and thus may be used to identify this species in song surveys that lack temperature correction. Inhabiting the vicinity of the American River drainage, this species ranges the farthest north of any in the Sierranus Group (
Fig. 19
).
Etymology.
l. rado
“scrape” +
cantans
“singing”. Refers to the rasping, abrasive sound quality of the numerous minor PT in the male song.
Notes.
Distributed at the northern limit of the Sierranus Group,
N. radocantans
is sympatric with
N. radicata
, the species with the most southerly distribution in the Carinata Group where their elevational distributions overlap. Selection for mate recognition at a contact zone could have driven the evolution of the distinctive, elaborate song with numerous OPT in this species. The population near Kyburz,
California
was located with a bat detector while night driving. Males were common but no females could be found, even after trampling vegetation.
N. radicata
songs were heard in trees at this locality. The
type
locality of Finnon Lake is private property that is owned and managed by the Mosquito Volunteer Fire Association (www.gomvfa.org). The conservation prospectus of this area is unknown.
Material examined.
Type
series only, see
Type
material above.
Sequoia
Group
The phylogenetically defined
Sequoia
Group includes the species
extincta
,
inversa
,
sequoia
,
prorocantans
, and
duplocantans
.
Males of all but one of the four species are morphologically separated from the Sierranus Group by the lower stridulatory file tooth density (46–62 teeth/mm). Like the Sierranus Group, the species are diagnosed by song and karyotype and are morphologically cryptic; only measurements of body parts and stridulatory file tooth density differ. As in the Sierranus Group, each species occupies distinct watersheds in the Sierra
Nevada
, albeit farther south (
Fig. 8
). This group contains the only pair of fully sympatric
Neduba
species within the same species Group.