A review of the Anatolian Gomphocerus Thunberg, 1815 (Orthoptera: Acrididae Gomphocerinae) via morphological and bioacoustics characters: data suggesting a new species, a new subgenus and three new statuses
Author
Mol, Abbas
0000-0003-2582-1377
Department of Emergency Aid and Disaster Management, Faculty of Health Sciences, Aksaray University, Aksaray, TURKEY abbasmol 19 @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 2582 - 1377
abbasmol19@gmail.com
Author
Şirin, Deniz
0000-0001-5475-173X
Department of Biology, Faculty of Art & Science, Tekirdag Namık Kemal University, 59030, Tekirdag, TURKEY denizsirin 19 @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 5475 - 173 X
denizsirin19@gmail.com
Author
Taylan, Mehmet Sait
Department of Biology, Institute of Postgraduate Education, Hakkari University, Hakkari, TURKEY
Author
Sevgili, Hasan
0000-0002-7289-6243
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetic, Faculty of Art & Science, Ordu University, Ordu, TURKEY hsevgili @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 7289 - 6243
hsevgili@gmail.com
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-10-12
5353
5
401
429
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5353.5.1
journal article
272974
10.11646/zootaxa.5353.5.1
e156c15d-3df9-49d3-b93a-bc7eb4deae7d
1175-5326
10010058
91974351-A87C-446D-9069-9424B92D9BC2
Gomphocerus
(
Gomphocerus
)
eyluldenizi
sp. n.
Material
:
Male
specimens collected from
Turkey
,
Erzurum
,
Palandöken Mountains
,
N 39.823889
,
E 41.291944
,
2890 m
.,
22.viii.2015
, and male calling song recorded from
one male
in the field and laboratory (or room) conditions by authors
.
Description of male calling song
: One record from a male was examined. Calling song consists of a phrase lasting 34.88 s and composed of about 81 syllables (
Fig. 5A
). The phrase begins quietly and reached the maximum intensity at the 20 syllables (1/4 of the phrase) (
Fig. 5A
). Oscillographic analysis show that each syllable (RPU) lasts in 415–482 ms and a syllable consists of the two different structural parts (
Figs. 5B and 5C
). The syllable contains two different structural pulses. The first part includes 9–11 low-amplitude distinguishable pulses (all of the last in 205–225 ms) which have gaps (8–13 ms) and the second part of the syllable (duration: 172–186 ms) includes higher amplitude distinguishable 10–11 distinct pulses without gaps (
Fig. 5C
).