A taxonomic study of the genus Austrohancockia Günther (Orthoptera: Tetrigoidea: Tetrigidae)
Author
Deng, Weian
Author
Zheng, Zhemin
Author
Wei, Shizhen
text
Zootaxa
2008
1896
63
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.184448
693e4ce8-c73d-4ee3-bd5a-1069e79cda2a
1175-5326
184448
Austrohancockia
Günther, 1938
Austrohancockia
Günther, 1938
, Mitt. Zool. Mus. Berlin, 23:349.
Pseudohancockia
Zheng et Liang, 1987
, Entomotaxonomia, 9(3): 243.
Austronancockia
Günther; Liang et Zheng, 1991, Acta Zoot. Sin., 16(2): 194.
Austrohancockia
Günther
; Liang and Zheng, 1998, Fauna Sinica, Insecta vol.12, Orth. Tetrigoidea, 37–38.
Austrohancockia
Günther
; Zheng, 2005, Fauna of Tetrigoidea from Western
China
, 35.
Austronancockia
Gnther;
Deng, Zheng & Wei, 2007
, Fauna of the Tetrigoidea from Yunnan and Guangxi, 34.
Type
species:
Austrohancockia kuangtungensis
(
Tinkham, 1936
)
.
Body small, stout and short. Vertex very wide, width of vertex 2–3 times the width of an eye. Frontal costa widely forked between the ocelli, the rami strongly divergent. Antennae filiform, inserted below the eyes. Eyes globular, paired ocelli inserted between the lower margins of eyes. dorsum of pronotum granulose, rough with irregular longitudinal tubercles and rugosity. Median carina of pronotum generally strongly elevated and foliaceous before the shoulders in profile. humeral angle arcuate or cornute. Apex of hind pronotal process concave. Posterior angles of lateral lobes truncate, posterior margins of lateral lobes of pronotum with one concavity. Tegmina and hind wings absent. Margins of fore and middle femora with dentation, hind femora generally with tubercules on outside, first segment of posterior tarsi longer than the third.
Austrohancockia
is closely related to
Hancockia
Kirby
, but differs in apex of hind pronotal process concave, tegmina and hind wings absent.
Biology and ecology:
They are typical inhabitants of moist places in tropical rainforests, such as marshes, moist stony ground, on the ground between fallen leaves and on the border of streams. They are capable of swimming on the surface of the water, and readily leap into the water when alarmed. They feed on mosses and other forms of humus. They lay eggs in the mud-mostly at the beginning of the rainy season and generally overwinter as adults.