Dravidacris annamalaica gen. et sp. nov. a new pygmy unicorn grasshopper (Orthoptera: Tetrigidae) from South India
Author
Bhaskar, Dhaneesh
IUCN SSC Grasshopper Specialist Group, Trier University, Germany. & SIGTET-Special Interest Group Tetrigidae. & Care Earth Trust, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, 600061, India.
Author
Sankararaman, H.
Vanavarayar Institute of Agriculture, Manakkadavu, Pollachi, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu 642103, India. & Department of Crop protection (Entomology), Vanavarayar Institute of Agriculture, Manakkadavu, Pollachi, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu 642103, India.
Author
Kasalo, Niko
SIGTET-Special Interest Group Tetrigidae. & University of Zagreb, Faculty of Science, Department of Biology, Rooseveltovtrg 6, HR- 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-10-20
5196
3
420
432
journal article
171434
10.11646/zootaxa.5196.3.6
3d991905-3cd1-4d94-9a8d-c311935296ad
1175-5326
7235500
F4552FEB-FF4F-49FB-B74B-6F8F7B8D450A
Genus
Dravidacris
Bhaskar et Kasalo
gen. nov.
Etymology
The genus
Dravidacris
is named in honour of the “
Dravidians
” (linguistic group), a term collectively representing the people who live in the southern states of
India
. The ending –acris is derived from the Greek word ἀκρίς, meaning “grasshopper, locust”, and is of feminine gender.
Diagnosis and comparative notes.
Dravidacris annamalaica
gen. et sp. nov.
(
Dravidian pygmy hopper
)can be distinguished from other
Metrodorinae
by the following set of characteristics: (i) elongated dorsally flat sword-like fastigium, forward and slightly upward raising flat rostrum, (ii) finely granulose integument, (iii) short medial carina of the vertex, present only in the anterior part of the elongated fastigium, (iv) anterior margin of the pronotum distinctly dentate, (v) fore femora distinctly widened in their middle part, (vi) dorsal distal margins of the fore femora with two distinct tubercles.
Dravidacris
gen. et sp. nov.
stands out from most of the genera of the subfamily
Metrodorinae
with its unique sword-like head. Within the polyphyletic tribe
Cleostratini
, it superficially resembles
Pseudomitraria
from Africa,
Rostella
Hancock, 1913
from SE Asia, and
Indomiriatra
from
India
. The similarity is the result of convergent evolution as there are apparent differences in how the horn develops in those genera. In
Pseudomitraria
, the horn developed as an extension below the scutellum and above the bifurcation of the frontal costa. In
Indomiriatra
and
Rostella
, the horn develops as an extension above the bifurcation of the frontal costa together with raised frontal costa and the medial carina of the fastigium. In
Dravidacris
gen. et sp. nov.
, the horn develops as an extension above the bifurcation of the frontal costa together with raised frontal costa.
A brief morphological comparison is listed in
Table 1
. It compares the new species with the horned genera and
Bolivaritettix sculptus
(
Bolívar, 1887
)
, the
type
species of the genus
Bolivaritettix
Günther, 1939
, hypothesized by
Günther (1959)
to be related to the African-Indian clade that he believed to include some of the horned genera. The genus
Bolivaritettix
consists of a large number of species. There has never been a systematic review of it, only reviews for individual countries that regularly describe even more species. As the diagnosis of the genus does not mention many of the characters that we use for comparison and as the identity of the genus is not clear, we compare the horned genera only to the
type
species (
Zha et al. 2015
,
Storozhenko 2018
,
Deng et al. 2018
). Although there is active research going on in the region, India’s fauna of
Tetrigidae
is still not taxonomically well-understood (
Gupta & Chandra 2017
,
Bhaskar et al. 2020
). We do not provide a detailed examination of all the species present in
India
because much more research is needed to establish order in the taxa.