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 cascadia
Cole, Weissman, & Lightfoot
,
sp. n.
Fig. 9
(distribution),
Fig. 17
(male and female habitus, calling song, male and female terminalia, karyotype),
Plate 1
F–H (live habitus),
Plate 4H
(male calling song),
Plate 7E
(male ventral sclerite),
Plate 11H
(female subgenital plate).
Common name.
Cascade Shieldback.
History of recognition.
None.
Type material.
HOLOTYPE
MALE
:
USA
,
OR
,
Jackson Co.
,
Wildcat Campground
,
Hyatt
Lake
Complex
,
Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument
,
42.18283N
,
122.44775W
,
1531 m
,
27-29-VII-2016
,
JA Cole
,
JAC000002023
[specimen barcode], DNA218 [genomic], SING0616 [DNA extraction], JCR160727_02 [recording], 125 [teeth], 3.7 [mm stridulatory file length], tegmen in gelcap below specimen, deposited in
CAS
,
Entomology
type #19708.
PARATYPES
(n = 12): 5♁, same data as holotype,
LACM
; 4♁,
same data as holotype,
CAS
; 1♁,
same data as holotype,
JAC
;
1♀
,
same data as holotype except
28-VIII-2019
,
DB Weissman
&
DC Lightfoot
,
CAS
;
1♀
,
Woodruff
Meadow
,
30 mi.
SW Crater
L.,
42.885125N
,
122.509206W
,
6-VIII-1960
,
JR Helfer
,
CAS
.
Measurements.
(mm, ♁n = 7,
♀
n = 1) Hind femur ♁18.05–18.95
♀
19.91, pronotum total length ♁9.20–9.81,
♀
8.85, prozona length ♁3.01–4.65,
♀
4.55, metazona dorsal length ♁5.10–6.80,
♀
4.30, pronotum constriction width ♁2.07–2.30,
♀
2.55, metazona dorsal width ♁6.50–7.25,
♀
6.49, head width ♁4.10–4.68,
♀
5.02, ovipositor length
♀
16.00.
Distribution.
Southern Cascade and Siskiyou mountain ranges of southern
Oregon
.
Habitat.
Understory and edges of coniferous forest.
Seasonal occurrence.
Scant records are from mid-July through late August. Adult activity probably lasts from midsummer through fall until first frosts.
Stridulatory file.
(n = 4) length
3.4–3.7 mm
, 125–133 teeth, tooth density 36.7 ± 2.1 (33.8–38.8) teeth/mm.
FIGURE 17.
N. cascadia
male and female habitus, calling song, male and female terminalia, karyotype.
Song.
(n = 6) Typical Convexa Clade “zwee-zwee” song
type
but with a significantly slower PTR of 1.8±
0.1
s-
1 (ANCOVA
P
= 1.08×10
-5
) and longer MPTL of 498.2 ± 65.5 ms (ANCOVA
P
= 4.27×10
-11
) than all other Convexa Clade taxa. PTF is 13.9 ± 2.2 kHz.
Karyotype.
(n=2) 2n♁ = 26 (
2m
+
22t
+ Xt +Yt) T19-16, S19-90, paratopotype.
Recognition.
The male ventral sclerite of
N. cascadia
has a blunt apex with scattered large tubercles and a short lateral process that blends into the shaft by an obtuse angle. This contrasts with
N. convexa
and
N. longiplutea
, both distributed to the south, which have the ventral sclerite apex low if not flat and a long lateral process with numerous fine tubercles that are arranged in rows.
N. steindachneri
to the north has a mushroom-shaped ventral sclerite with few large tubercles and a blunt, recurved lateral process. The female subgenital plate is unique among the Convexa Clade in having straight apical margins. The slow PTR separates the song of
N. cascadia
from all other Carinata Group species;
N. steindachneri
to the north has the fastest PTR in this species Group.
Etymology.
cascadia
,
reflecting the southern Cascade Range distribution.
Notes.
The distribution of this species lies between that of
N. steindachneri
to the north and
N. convexa
to the south. Further studies are needed to determine the limits of the ranges of northern Carinata Group taxa. Museum specimens from intermediate localities are nymphs and are only tentatively identified as this species. The calling songs and genitalia of all three species differ, so sympatry may be expected if these differences confer reproductive isolation. That calling song extremes of PTR occur in two species with adjacent ranges suggests prezygotic reproductive isolation mediated by calling song.
Material examined.
In addition to
type
material (above),
QUESTIONABLE PLACEMENT
(n = 3):
USA
,
OR
,
Jackson Co.
,
2♀
nymphs,
Little Applegate River
,
42.198722N
,
123.045356W
,
701 m
,
6-VIII-1950
,
B Malkin
,
CAS
;
1♀
nymph,
Union Creek
,
42.906905N
,
122.445598W
,
7-31-VIII-1950
,
B Malkin
,
CAS
.