Systematics of cryptic species of Lebinthus crickets in Mount Makiling (Grylloidea, Eneopterinae)
Author
Robillard, Tony
Author
Yap, Sheryl
Author
Yngente, Mark V.
text
Zootaxa
2013
3693
1
49
63
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3693.1.3
2f4321fa-1c55-4564-9f4b-334d44b4a7ae
1175-5326
284291
9C7822BB-05A7-4844-8964-C7E556967527
Lebinthus sanchezi
Bolívar, 1889
(
Figs 1
A–D; 2A–C; 3A,B,E; 4A–C; 5A–D; 6)
Lebinthus sanchezi
Bolívar, 1889
: 425
;
Chopard 1968
: 354
;
Otte 1994
: 67
;
Eades
et al.
2013
. Synonym names
Lebinthus makilingus
Otte, 2007
new synonymy
.
Otte 2007a
: 356
, not validly published; 2007b: 33. This study: similar to
L. sanchezi
according to the description and photographs of male genitalia.
Systematic discussion.
The
types
of
Bolívar (1889)
supposedly located in Madrid (
Otte 1994
;
Eades
et al.
2013
) could not be located in the collection (
Paris 1993; M. Paris, pers. comm.
) and are considered lost. Due to the necessity for a clear taxonomic reference for the species of the diverse genus
Lebinthus
upon which to base future systematic work, we designate a
neotype
from the material examined in the present study.
The original description of
L. sanchezi
is very brief (
Lebinthus
without the yellow lateral stripes as in
L. bitaeniatus
) and may match both
L. makilingus
and
L. puyos
n. sp.
, consequently we choose the
neotype
specimens according to geographical proximity with the original
type
locality. The
type
locality of Bolívar’s
types
being “Jala Jala (Distrito of Morong)”, a place very close to our sampled locality “Pakil, University of the Phillipines Laguna Land Grant”, we consider the only
Lebinthus
specimens found in this area as the
neotype
series of
L. sanchezi
.
L. sanchezi
has in fact a wider distribution, as it is found both in Land Grant and in Mount Makiling, while
L. puyos
n. sp.
was only found in Mount Makiling.
According to photographs of male genitalia in Otte’s (2007a) description of
L. makilingus
, this species is the same as the
Lebinthus
species found both in Land Grant (original
type
locality of
L. sanchezi
) and in Mount Makiling.
L. makilingus
should thus be synonymised under
L. sanchezi
.
Type
material.
Male
neotype
:
Philippines
.
Luzon, Paete [Pakil], University of the
Philippines
Laguna Land Grant, secondary forest at
500 m
from station,
14°23'56.9"N
121°32'47.2"E
,
376 m
(GPS LG2),
4.vii.2011
, day, leaf litter, coll. T. Robillard (UPLB-MNH). Paraneotypes (
6 males
,
3 females
).
Philippines
.
Luzon, Paete [Pakil], University of the
Philippines
Laguna Land Grant station, secondary forest, reared specimens F1 generation (F0 collected on
vii.2011
, day, leaf litter), coll. T. Robillard:
2 males
,
1 female
(UPLB-MNH);
3 males
,
1 female
(
MNHN
);
1 male
,
1 female
(
MNCN
).
Other material examined.
Philippines
: Luzon, Laguna, Los Baňos, Mount Makiling, base, secondary forest on campus,
14°09'12.9"N
121°14'05.0"E
,
168 m
(GPS Maki1),
1 female
,
TR
282b,coll. T. Robillard (
MNHN
).
Philippines
: Luzon, Laguna, Los Baňos, Mount Makiling, Flat Rock, W of Mulawin Creek, secondary forest,
14°08'50.2"N
121°13'41.5"E
,
244 m
(GPS Maki2),
28.vi.2011
, coll. T. Robillard, night, leaf litter:
1 female
,
TR
180 (UPLB-MNH);
4 males
,
TR
311,
TR
179 (UPLB-MNH);
TR
283,
TR
178, on plant (h =
10 cm
) (
MNHN
);
3 females
,
TR
645 (UPLB-MNH);
TR
344,
TR
345 (
MNHN
).
Type
locality.
Philippines
, Luzon, Jala Jala, Morong District.
Neotype
locality:
Philippines
, Luzon, Pakil, University of the
Philippines
Laguna Land Grant.
Distribution.
Philippines
, Luzon Island, west of Laguna Bay.
Diagnosis.
Species of small size, brown color, differing from sympatric
L. puyos
n. sp.
by black mask on face, fastigium with an orange band apically, vertex with faint longitudinal bands, characteristic color pattern on lateral lobes of pronotum, harp of males with a rectangular false mirror, diagonal vein absent, male genitalia with little differentiated triangular pseudephiphallic lophi.
L. sanchezi
appears as an intermediate form between the yellow banded species of
Lebinthus
(e.g.
L. bitaeniatus
and
L. luae
)
in terms of genitalic structure, and the brown species with a false mirror (e.g.
L. truncatipennis
,
L. villemantae
and
L. puyos
) in terms of external morphology and coloration.
Redescription.
Size small. Coloration brown with contrasted light and dark patterns (
Fig. 1
A–D). Head dorsum (
Fig.2
A) with 4 wide but faint brown longitudinal band, each band containing a thin black line; area posterior to eyes yellow. Eyes dark brown, with a paler dorsal longitudinal band. Fastigium wider than long, setose, dark brown, with a contrasted vivid orange band apically; upper facial part yellow. Scapes whitish with faint darker patterns; antennae yellow at base then progressively dark brown. Face (
Fig. 2
B) with a black mask extended bellow antennae and eyes. Mouthparts variably mottled with dark brown and yellow brown; maxillary palpi yellow brown with dark brown longitudinal patterns, darker apically. Lateral part of head (
Fig.2
C) yellow, with a black band posterior to eyes prolonging the dark coloration of pronotum. Pronotum: Dorsal disk slightly trapezoidal, straight posteriorly; yellow brown mottled with dark brown, lateral
FIGURE 1.
.
Lebinthus sanchezi
(A–D), male in dorsal (A) and lateral (B) views; female in dorsal (C) and lateral (D) views.
Lebinthus puyos
(E–H), male in dorsal (E) and lateral (F) views; female in dorsal (G) and lateral (H) views. Photographs of
Lebinthus bitaeniatus
male (I) and female (J) are represented for comparison purpose (modified from Robillard & Tan 2013). Scale bar = 1 cm.
FIGURE 2.
Lebinthus sanchezi
(A–C), head in dorsal (A), facial (B) and lateral (C) views.
Lebinthus puyos
(D–F), head in dorsal (D), facial (E) and lateral (F) views. Scale bar = 1 mm.
edges always whitish, posterior area mostly dark brown. Lateral lobes black dorsally, ventral margin yellow with a median black patch sometimes linked to the anterior margin and/or to the dorsal dark coloration (
Fig. 2
C). Legs: Fore and mid legs light brown, femora with dark brown spots, tibiae with dark rings.
Hind
femora brown, with strong striated dark patterns on outer faces, knees dark brown with a pale inner preapical area; hind tibiae with dark rings. Tarsomeres I/
III-1
yellow brown, apices dark brown. Tarsomeres
III-1
with 2 spines on dorsal outer edges (n = 10) and 0–2 (m = 1, n=10) on outer faces. Abdomen homogeneously brown dorsally, yellowish brown ventrally. Cerci yellowish brown, with dark rings near apex.
Male:
FWs not reaching abdomen midlength. FW coloration (
Fig. 3
A): Cells dark brown, not translucent; veins dark brown except anterior parts of anal veins orange brown; MA and MP orange brown, intermedian area whitish, without transverse veins; R dark brown, area between MA and R dark brown, rest of lateral field progressively lighter toward ventral margin, with dark brown longitudinal veins. FW venation (
Fig. 3
A): 1A widely curved (angle>120°); stridulatory file with 240 teeth (n = 1) (
Fig. 3
E), located on transverse part of 1A only. CuP not visible. Diagonal vein absent or very faint, preplaced by a convex fold underlying harp posterior margin. Harp wide, occupying most of dorsal field surface, with a strong transverse harp vein, polyfurcated anteriorly and delimiting a false mirror barely rounded, i.e. a distinctive area located on harp posterior corner (not homologous to the mirror of other cricket species: cell d1,
Robillard & Desutter-Grandcolas 2004a
). CuA curved innerly near apex, its distal part weak, surrounding the median fold, small, triangular, and located dorsally. Longitudinal veins of dorsal field strong apically, transverse veins very weak. Mirror (d1) not differentiated. Apical field absent, with no bifurcation of CuA posterior to diagonal vein. Lateral field with 5 strong longitudinal veins including MA, R and 3 more ventral veins; latero-dorsal angle made by MP; R without bifurcating veins. Subgenital plate elongate, clog-shaped.
Male genitalia
(
Fig. 4
A–C): Intermediate between
L. bitaeniatus
and
L. villemantae
. Pseudepiphallic sclerite trapezoidal, slightly convex dorsally; posterior apex with short triangular lophi, setose, wider than long and separated by a V-shaped indentation; anterior margin slightly indented, its lateral margins slightly raised dorsally. Rami short. Pseudepiphallic parameres F-shaped. Ectophallic arc complete almost straight, its base with short ventro-posterior expansions, sclerotized basally. Ectophallic fold with a wide X-shaped preapical sclerite. Ectophallic apodemes very long, thin and divergent, exceeding anterior margin of pseudepiphallus. Endophallic sclerite wide and long, exceeding anterior margin of pseudepiphallus, its posterior apex with a median triangular expansion and short lateral arms; endophallic apodeme made of wide lateral lamellas but without a median crest.
Female:
FWs short (
Fig. 3
B), rounded, going slightly beyond posterior margin of second tergite, not overlapping but close together; dorsal field light brown with 6 strong orange brown longitudinal veins. Lateral field dark brown, with 2 strong dark brown longitudinal veins. Ovipositor shorter than hind femora; apex lanceolate, slightly denticulate on dorsal edge.
FIGURE 3.
Forewing venation in dorsal view:
Lebinthus sanchezi
, male (A), female (B);
Lebinthus puyos
, male (C), female (D); scale bar = 1 mm. SEM photograph of male stridulatory file of
L. sanchezi
in ventral view (E); scale bar = 100 μm.
FIGURE 4.
Lebinthus sanchezi
(A–C), male genitalia in dorsal (A), ventral (B) and lateral (C) views.
Lebinthus puyos
(D–F), male genitalia in dorsal (D), ventral (E) and lateral (F) views. Scale bars = 1 mm.
Female genitalia
: flat, little sclerotized, with a basal sclerotized ring, apex rounded.
Juvenile.
Dark brown mottled with light brown (
Fig. 5
B).
Measurements.
See
Table 1
.
Habitat and life history traits.
L. sanchezi
lives in the leaf litter of secondary forested areas (
Fig. 5
A–D). It is found on top of leaves in small bushes and sometimes in the leaf litter. Males have been observed singing on top of leaf litter or low plants during day and night.
Behavior. Calling song
(
Fig. 6
): In the field the calling song of
L. sanchezi
consists of short trills comprising 58±13 syllables. Each echeme lasts for 0.99±
0.19 s
with a period of 28.36±
8.89 s
. Syllables are very short (duration =6.4±1.9 ms; period = 17.0±6.3 ms) and show a homogeneous amplitude profile suggesting a regular wing closing movement during wing stridulation. The spectrum shows a clear dominant peak at 24.4±1.2 kHz with one peak harmonically related at about 48 kHz.
Mating behavior:
Observations in the field and in the laboratory showed multiple matings, as described in another
Lebinthus
species (
Narvaez & Robillard 2012
).
TABLE 1.
Measurements of
Lebinthus sanchezi
.
PronL PronW FWL FWW FIIIL FIIIW Male
neotype
1.9 3.2 2.7 2.3 8.7 3.3
Males (n=5) 1.9–2.1 3.2–3.3 2.6–3.4 2–2.5 8.7–9.5 3.2–3.3 (mean) (2.0) (3.2) (2.9) (2.3) (9.2) (3.3) Females (n=5) 2–2.1 3.2–3.4 0.6–1.1 - 9.7–10 3.3–3.7 TIIIL TIII OL Ias Ibs Oas Obs