Studies in Australian Tettigoniidae: Three New Species of Agraeciini From North-eastern Australia Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae; Conocephalinae; Agraeciini
Author
Rentz, Dcf
Author
Su, You Ning
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-06-25
4623
2
283
305
journal article
26412
10.11646/zootaxa.4623.2.4
b18884c2-241d-4de3-b8a9-df75cf161019
1175-5326
3255441
9E8BCE12-CF6B-4B9B-B6DA-049CEE05D2D7
Salomona
Blanchard 1853
Salomona
was revised by
Willemse (1959)
.
Rentz and Balderson (1979)
included
S. solida
Walker
in their catalogue of Australian
Tettigoniidae
.
Cigliano
et al.
(2019)
include 81 species in
Salomona
plus 10 subspecies.
Ingrisch (1998)
included several species of
Salomona
in his monograph of the
Agraeciini
of the Oriental Region but no
Salomona
species from the Australasian region was included. Here we describe a large species that seems to be confined to Iron Range, Qld, Map 1.
Salomona nori
3
Rentz & Su, sp. nov.
Figs. 9–11, 12A–G, 13B, 14C); Table 2; Map 1
ANIC Number:
Salomona
sp. 4
Comments.
Recent improvements in the roads, including ingress and egress, to Kutini-Payamu (Iron Range) in far north Queensland has resulted in an influx of tourists to the area, many of them with entomological interests. This coupled with the ease of photographing natural history images has resulted in many inquiries concerning a “large, robust ferocious katydid that lives in tree holes. Tour guides have discovered this katydid on their night tours. Here we provide a name for the species and discuss a related species from Sunday Island, Qld. We present some notes on the taxonomic position, biology and ecology of the new species.
History.
A single
Salomona
species,
S. solida
Walker
, has been described form northeast
Australia
. No additional specimens have been encountered since the original description many years ago and there was conjecture that
type
specimens may have been mislabelled. It has appeared sparsely in the literature but the following virtually 3 We take pleasure in naming this species in honour of our colleague, Dr. Norihiro Ueshima. For over 40 years Dr. Ueshima has been the recipient of an annual shipment of tettigoniid testes from DCFR, mostly from Australian localities. He has provided detailed analyses of the material when requested.