Review of the Balkan Isophya (Orthoptera: Phaneropteridae) with particular emphasis on the Isophya modesta group and remarks on the systematics of the genus based on morphological and acoustic data
Author
Dragan P. Chobanov
Author
Beata Grzywacz
Author
Ionuţ Ş. Iorgu
Author
Battal Cιplak
Author
Maya B. Ilieva
Author
Elżbieta Warchałowska-Śliwa
text
Zootaxa
2013
3658
1
1
81
journal article
39033
10.11646/zootaxa.3658.1.1
0adf09ba-5301-4828-abf6-8dbe89f041ca
1175-5326
246551
C02D1C74-25C0-41DD-B098-62098EB7B62A
Isophya hospodar
(Saussure, 1898)
(
Figs 1, 2
,
31
,
56
,
80
,
105
,
130, 131
,
135
,
191
)
Jaquetia hospodar
Saussure
: Saussure 1898 (sp.n.).
Isophya medimontana
Nedelkov
,
syn.n.
: Nedelkov 1908 (sp.n.).
Isophya burmevi
Nedelkov
: Nedelkov 1908 (sp.n.).
Isophya tschirpanensis
Nedelkov
: Nedelkov 1908 (sp.n.)
.
Isophya hospodar
(Saussure)
: Kis and Peshev 1967.
Isophya hospodar medimontana
Nedelkov
: Harz 1969 (
stat.nov.
).
Morphological description
: see the references above; Harz 1969.
Bioacoustics
: Heller 1988.
Karyotype
: Warchałowska-Śliwa
et al.
2008.
Synonymy and addition to the description
: Nedelkov (1908) described three taxa of
Isophya
from Bulgaria—
I. medimontana
,
I. burmevi
and
I. tschirpanensis
. Ramme (1951) synonymized the latter with
I. burmevi
. Kis and Peshev (1967), after redescription and determining the generic belonging of
Jaquetia
(=
Isophya
)
hospodar
, synonymized
I. burmevi
and
I. tschirpanensis
with the latter without mentioning
I. medimontana
. Harz (1969) provisionally related the latter as a subspecies of
I. hospodar
pointing that the case could concern synonymy.
After revision of the
type
series of
I. medimontana
(see Appendix) and additional material from the region of the Sofia Kettle, Lyulin and Lozenska Planina Mountains, we did not find stable morphological differences between this population and the ones from Dobrogea (the
type
area) and Southeastern
Bulgaria
. Some of the specimens from the Sofia Kettle are smaller than the average body size recorded but this may be connected with the microclimate since such small individuals were found also in another region of
Bulgaria
(Matochina Village in SE
Bulgaria
). The stridulatory file also does not show differences between populations (compare
Figs 130
A, B and 131A, B). One male from Sofia had file length of
2.2 mm
with 68 teeth (52 normally developed and 16 small apical); a stouter male from Eastern Rhodope Mts (SE
Bulgaria
) showed a file length of
2.65 mm
with 73 teeth (57 normal and 16 small); and a male from Gura Dobrogei (SE
Romania
, the northernmost locality known for this species)—a length of
2.3 mm
with 63 teeth. For comparison, Heller (1988) counted 78 teeth in a male from Edirne (European
Turkey
). The female stridulatory apparatus is shown in
Fig. 130
D. Based on these data we consider
I. medimontana
as junior subjective synonym of
I. hospodar
.
Distribution (
Fig. 191
) and phenology
: Endemic species for the Eastern Balkan Peninsula, fragmentary distributed in Southeastern
Romania
(Dobrogea), Southeastern and Central
Bulgaria
(westwards reaching the Sofia Kettle), European
Turkey
and very locally in Northeasternmost
Greece
. Early species typical for hilly limestone terrains (from the sea level up to
700–800 m
) in mesophyte grass associations that become xerophyte in early summer. The species may be found in very low grass associations on pastures. Nymphs—(II)III–V, imago—IV–VI.
Notes to the literature distribution data
: Peshev (1970b) wrongly refers the locality “Malko Tarnovo” to this species. The case concerns
I. pavelii
.
2.
Isophya rectipennis
species group
The group has a number of primitive characters probably derived from these of the
I. straubei
group. The fastigium is slightly wider, equal (in most taxa) or up to only half as wide as scape (in
I. triangularis
Brunner
von Wattenwyl, 1891). The pronotal disc is not saddle shaped but sometimes the metazone is distinctly wider than the prozone. The length of male tegmona is more or less equal to that of pronotum. The length and width of CuP varies between taxa; CuP and CuA are clearly separated or moderately approximated. The stridulatory file is well developed or partly reduced (in
I. rectipennis
) and bears 50–150 teeth. The female stridulatory apparatus has two functional rows of basal spines. The ventral keels of hind femora usually do not possess spines or have single ones. The apical part of male cerci is gradually in- (and sometimes slightly up-) curved, tapered and bearing long pointed or sometimes stout, crest like tooth. The ovipositor is short to moderately elongate, usually less than 2.1 (and always less than 2.3) times longer than pronotum. The basal lateral pit of ovipositor is opened or partly closed; the lamella lacks excision in its distal part. The body colouration is greenish, sometimes with darker or lighter pattern. The lateral margins of pronotum possess reddish stripe only in metazone lying above the light stripe. Melanism is always absent. The song consists of groups or phrases of syllables that may be rapidly repeated in sequences (
I. pavelii
,
I. nervosa
Ramme, 1931
), simple sequences of syllables (
I. ilkazi
Ramme, 1951
—after Heller 1990) or single syllables (
I. thracica
,
I. cania
). The syllables are short (<100 ms) and decrescending (with a gradual decrease in amplitude after the beginning). The X-chromosome is subacrocentric (
type
1A or 1B according to Warchałowska- Śliwa
et al.
2008).
The group after Ünal (2010) includes six species and one additional subspecies. Chobanov (2009a, b) included here also
I. thracica
and
I. cania
Karabag, 1975
as intermediate between this group and
I. modesta
group, though Ünal (2010) places them as relatives of
I. schneideri
Brunner
von Wattenwyl, 1878 and some other taxa. Regarding the morphology, known bioacoustic data, and distribution, both
I. thracica
and
I. cania
may show similarities to the
I. rectipennis
(and partly to
I. straubei
group in the case of
I. thracica
as pointed by Karabag 1962) and to
I. modesta
group (especially in the case of
I. cania
) but not to
I. schneideri
. These characters include for example: (1) form of tegmen—elongated with an obtuse anal corner and narrower than the width of metazone (in
I. schneideri
the tegmen is broader than the metazone, the anal corner is almost rectangular); (2) tegminal venation in maledistinct separation of CuP and CuA veins (in
schneideri—
CuP and CuA are closely attached), and in femalemostly with parallel veins, especially laterally, and very weak development of reticulation (in
schneideri
the venation is reticulate similarly to that of the
I. speciosa
group—see below); (3) song (see Heller 1988 for
I. thracica
and Sevgili
et al.
2011 for
I. cania
)—consists of single decrescending syllables followed by an isolated after-click similarly to that of
I. modesta
group but with short main syllable part as in
rectipennis
group and in
I. bureschi
; on the contrary in
schneideri
the song is distinctly elaborated, divided into two parts, resulting from incomplete open-and-closing movements similarly to these of the
I. speciosa
group (Chobanov, unpublished data); (4) lack of melanism while melanism may be partly developed in
I. schneideri
, which again places the latter closer to the
I. speciosa
group. The features of
I. schneideri
also doubt its close relationships with
I. sikorai
Ramme, 1951
, proposed by Ünal (2010).
Recently, there were two contradictory opinions on the grouping of
I. yaraligozi
. Though Chobanov (2009b) tentatively relates it to the
I. rectipennis
group, Ünal (2003, 2010) places it within
I. modesta
group according to its similarities with
I. obtusa
mostly concerning the relative length of ovipositor and the cercus shape. However, the mentioned characters are highly convergent in
Isophya
and cannot be regarded as good markers alone. We relate
I. obtusa
to another group (for diagnoses of groups see Warchałowska-Śliwa
et al.
2008 and the present paperbelow). And though
I. yaraligozi
is not closely related to
I. obtusa
the new data on song and morphology of the former support its belonging to the
I. modesta
group.
Thus, we here consider the
I. rectipennis
group with 9 taxa distributed in the Eastern Balkan Peninsula and
Asia
Minor
to
Lebanon
and
Syria
. We regard the group with three complexes: (1)
I. rectipennis
complex—
I. rectipennis
and
I. triangularis
; (2)
I. pavelii
complex—
I. ilkazi
,
I. nervosa
,
I. pavelii
,
I. stenocauda stenocauda
Ramme, 1951
,
I. stenocauda obenbergeri
Mařan, 1958
; (3)
I. thracica
and
I. cania
(having acoustic similarities with
I. modesta
group).