New species of Pachyphloea Redtenbacher, 1906 (Phasmida: Pseudophasmatidae Xerosomatinae) with comments on Grylloclonia Zompro, 2004 n. syn.
Author
Murcia, Andres David
Author
Cadena-Castañeda, Oscar J.
Author
Noriega, Jorge Ari
Author
García, Alexander García
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-06-26
4623
3
545
554
journal article
26372
10.11646/zootaxa.4623.3.6
89686326-030c-4d79-8ccb-8c2db484c121
1175-5326
3258640
F85DD0E5-0452-4EAB-843D-BC32F12F0A87
Genus
Pachyphloea
Redtenbacher, 1906
Diagnosis:
Body in brown tones, robust and granular, with moderate foliaceous extensions in the legs and some species in the abdomen, mainly in tergites V to VII, more conspicuous in females than in males. Distal half of the antennae white or light brown, posterior portion of the vertex with spinose prolongations, becoming tubercles or foliate in shape, scapus and pedicellus unarmed. In dorsal view with a median line running from the anterior margin of the pronotum to the last abdominal segment, pronotum and metanotum wider than long; mesonotum longer than pronotum; metanotum longer than wide; the thorax may be armed with mid-sized spines, foliose extensions, or without any of these. Cerci in both sexes conical and very small, partially covered by tergum X in dorsal view. Subgenital plate with posterior margin rounded or triangular in females; males present variable poculum that covers the vomer completely.
FIGURE 1.
Pachyphloea magnoliae
n. sp.
(Male)
A–B.
Habitus in lateral and dorsal views, respectively.
C–D.
Head and pronotum in lateral and dorsal views, respectively.
E–G.
Terminalia in lateral, dorsal and ventral views, respectively.
Type
species:
Pachyphloea aberrans
Redtenbacher, 1906
by original monotypy
Comments:
In his taxonomic key,
Zompro (2004)
differentiated
Pachyphloea
and the
Grylloclonia
-
Dicranoclonia
Zompro, 2004
complex (synonymized under
Acanthoclonia
Stål, 1875
by
Conle
et al
., 2011
) based on the arrangement of lateral margins of the mesonotum and the presence/absence of a sensorial area on the prosternum. The arrangement of the lateral margins of the mesonotum however is a variable character even within species, normally with females presenting relatively broader margins of mesonotum than males. The larger size and increased robustness of these in females leads to a gradual widening of the mesothorax towards the posterior in which the posterior margin is wider than the anterior. This occurs for species of both genera, without any other notable difference between them for this character. Likewise, the sensorial area, or transverse ridge on the anterior half of the prosternun, is visible in both
Pachyphloea
and
Grylloclonia
. Additional traits that were used by
Zompro (2004)
to distinguish between these genera, such as the degree of development of spines and foliaceous extensions or terminalia structure, have been assessed to still serve for species recognition, albeit not to separate genera.
FIGURE 2.
Pachyphloea magnoliae
n. sp.
(Female)
A–B.
Habitus in lateral and dorsal views, respectively.
C–D.
Head and pronotum in lateral and dorsal views, respectively.
E–G.
Terminalia in lateral, dorsal and ventral views, respectively.
In view of the aforementioned characteristics, and taking intrageneric variability into account, we propose
Grylloclonia
Zompro, 2004
n. syn.
as synonym of
Pachyphloea
since there are not enough diagnostic characters to differentiate the two genera.