The tribe Dysoniini part VI: Phylogeny, biogeography and evolutionary trends of the lichen katydid genera (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Phaneropterinae). Eleventh contribution to the suprageneric organization of Neotropical phaneropterines
Author
Cadena-Castañeda, Oscar J.
0000-0001-5646-0602
ojccorthoptera@gmail.com
Author
Braun, Holger
0000-0002-1069-8794
braun@fcnym.unlp.edu.ar
Author
García, Alexander García
0000-0001-5646-0602
ojccorthoptera@gmail.com
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-07-19
5166
1
1
93
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5166.1.1
journal article
102846
10.11646/zootaxa.5166.1.1
7e35a6a2-7ddc-453b-99ec-20142ba284f2
1175-5326
6876209
17952A48-902C-47A0-A344-8B07490F3B28
Alexanderellus
Cadena-Castañeda
n. gen.
Diagnosis.
Body small and moderately slender. Coloration brown, with various whitish, black and green spots on the extremities and the tegmina (
Figs. 24A, B
). Head longer than wide and relatively narrow in profile; vertex moderately raised, ocellar tubercle little developed (
Figs. 24C, F
); antennae filiform with a few dispersed nodes on the flagellum. Meso- and metazona of pronotal disc elevated progressively (
Figs. 24C, F
). Tegmina transparent with some diffuse spots; ventro-distal portion of anal margin gently expanded; hind femur with a distal foliose spine (
Fig. 24B
). Cerci laterally flattened, with triangular branches of similar shape.
Taxa included.
Alexanderellus kumangui
Cadena-Castañeda
n. sp.
(
type
species)
and
A. mariposa
(
Gorochov, 2012b
)
n. comb.
(described as
Dysonia
(
Dysonia
)
mariposa
).
Distribution.
Amazon region of
Colombia
and eastern foothills of the Peruvian Andes (
Map 9
).
Map 9.
Distribution map of
Alexanderellus
n. gen.
species.
Etymology.
Dedicated to Professor Dr. Alexander García García, in gratitude for his friendship, teachings, continuous willingness to help, and in recognition of his impressive teaching work, making generation after generation fall in love with the study of arthropods. The grammatical gender is masculine.
Comparison.
The new genus is distinguished from the other genera of the
Dysoniini
by its greenish-brown coloration with green and whitish spots (similar only in some species of
Anaphidna
), dorso-ventrally flattened cerci with triangular branches (only
Dysonia pardalis
(
Gorochov, 2012a
)
has cerci of similar shape). The antennae of
Alexanderellus
are similar in structure to the antennae of
Paraphidnia
,
Anaphidna
,
Lichenomorphus
,
Lichenodentix
, and
Dysonia
, but the flagellum nodes are not as conspicuous in the new genus. The tegmina are almost translucent (with brown or green spots), similar to
Paraphidnia
and
Anaphidna
. In
Alexanderellus
the wings rest on the body, in contrast to the latter two genera, which have them narrower and projecting in a 40- to 45-degree angle from the abdomen. The hind femora of the new genus have a foliose spine similar in development to
Dysonia
species.
FIGURE 23.
Yungasacris
species. A
, G–H.
Y. multa
. Male habitus, cerci in dorsal and lateral view respectively.
B–C.
Y. grata grata
cerci in dorsal and lateral view.
D.
Y. grata rara
cerci in lateral view.
E–F.
Y. peruviana
cerci in dorsal and lateral view respectively. (Figs. B–F. after
Rehn, 1950
, Figs. D, G–H. after
Cadena-Castañeda & Gorochov, 2013
).
FIGURE 24.
Alexanderellus
n. gen.
species. A, C–E.
A. mariposa
n. comb.
B., F–I.
A. kumangui
n. sp.
(
Photos: A and C. A. Gorochov. Figs. D and E. after Gorochov, 2012)
Key to species of
Alexanderellus
n. gen.
1. Male cerci with a distal spine-like prolongation on the outer branch (
Figs. 24H–G
). Male subgenital plate with U-shaped emargination, styli conical...................................................
A. kumangui
Cadena-Castañeda
n. sp.
- Male cerci without a distal spine-like prolongation on the outer branch (
Figs. 24D–E
). Male subgenital plate with V-shaped emargination, cylindrical and longer styli compared to the previous species............................................................................................................
A. mariposa
Gorochov, 2012
n. comb.