Studies on Neotropical Pseudophyllinae: The placement and status of Dasyscelidius species (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae)
Author
Cadena-Castañeda, Oscar J.
Universidad Distrital Francisco José de Caldas. Grupo de Investigación en Artrópodos “ Kumangui ”, Bogotá, Colombia. Universidad INCCA de Colombia. Grupo en Ecología Evolutiva y Biogeografía Tropical ECOBIT.
Author
Poveda, Miguel D.
0000-0002-1040-838X
https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 1040 - 838 X
Author
Pulido, Sergio Omar
0000-0002-5657-6784
https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 5657 - 6784
Author
Ariza, Jeison Eduardo García
0000-0002-3381-0005
Universidad INCCA de Colombia. Grupo en Biotecnología y Ambiente. https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 3381 - 0005
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-02-10
5099
1
129
136
journal article
20707
10.11646/zootaxa.5099.1.6
a977db61-a492-4e3c-b685-399fa25234ea
1175-5326
6037009
0CAC2B3A-81B9-4D3E-BCB9-585ECEE83BEC
Dasyscelidius
Beier, 1954
http://lsid.speciesfile.org/urn:lsid:
Orthoptera
.speciesfile.org:TaxonName:6568
New diagnosis.
Medium size (
20-23 mm
) and moderately robust.
Coloration.
The only species included for this genus are brown with light yellow spots on the body (
Figs. 1
A-C), more noticeable on the legs, and black face (common in several genera of the tribe
pleminiini
) (
Fig. 1B
).
Head.
In front view ovoid, space between the antennal basins, as wide as half of the antennal scapus; fastigium slightly high and narrow; round and small eyes (
Fig. 1B
), in dorsal view, a little bit shorter than the margins of the antennal sockets. Ocelli reduced and diffused; scapus and pedicelus unarmed; maxillary palps moderately elongated (
Figs. 1
A-B).
Pronotum
slightly granulated, anterior margin projected onto the neck, in the prozone on the side edge only indicated with a longitudinal fold, the metazone not widened (
Fig. 1
).
Wings.
Tegmina is almost longer than the pronotum, broadly lanceolate, densely reticulate, with slightly prominent veins and an apex narrowly rounded (
Figs. 1A, C
); hind wings are reduced as small hyaline lobes.
Legs
slender, fore coxa armed with a conspicuous dorsal spine; all coxae are ventrally unarmed; fore femur not very strong compressed; mid tibia moderately grooved, dorsally unarmed, and all inner genicular lobes armed with a tiny blunt spine.
Abdomen
cylindrical, without modifications on the segments, epiproctus small and rounded (
Fig. 1D
). Reduced and conical cerci; ovipositor as long as two-thirds of the length of the hind femur, moderately curved and with a sinuous dorsal edge, pointed apex (
Fig. 1E
). Subgenital plate rectangular, wider than long, with a rather prolonged posterior border and with a medial notch (
Fig. 1F
). Male unknown.
Type
species.
Dasyscelidius atrifrons
(
Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1895
)
by original designation. Herein, the genus is regarded as monotypic.
Distribution.
Colombian Andes.
Comparison.
This genus is close to others of the tribe
pleminiini
, with a black face, medium-size and slender.
Dasyscelidius
has distinguished from the other genera in that the spines on the legs are medium to small in size, in contrast to the related genera of the tribe, which have moderately to well-developed lamellar spines.
Dasyscelidius
differs from the morphologically similar genus
Dasyscelus
due to its smaller size (
20-23 mm
.); absence of spines on the fore and mid tibiae’s dorsal margin; brown body coloration, and densely reticulate venation. In contrast,
Dasyscelus
groups larger species (
25-35 mm
.), with spines on the dorsal margin, venation with notorious spaces between the transverse and longitudinal veins, forming medium-sized cells. Additionally, the
Dasyscelus
species
have a coloration from dark brown, passing through grayish green, the pronotum is granular, and sometimes forming conspicuous tubercles, which resemble spines, that surround the pronotal disc as in
Dasyscelus dilatatus
Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1895
Comments.
Dasyscelidius
is considered monotypic in this contribution. The female
type
specimen of
D. atrifrons
has part of the rectum extracted outwards, protruding between the cerci, and it can be confused with the epiproct at first sight (
Figs. 1
D-E). The exact locality of the species is unknown since, in its description, it was only mentioned that it was collected from
Colombia
(
Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1895
). Recently, iNaturalist observations (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/70049414, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/67625294) and an examined female from
Bogotá
(deposited in CAUD, and agree with
type
description and measurements), being inhabitants of the Eastern Hills, where they cohabit with an undescribed genus and species, superficially very similar, although belonging to the tribe
Platyphyllini
. This is one of the reasons to clarify the status and tribal location of the
Dasyscelidius
species
, thus being the object of differentiation between the short-winged Andean taxa of the tribes
Pleminiini
and
Platyphyllini
, which could be confused (Medellin
et al
. in prep.). The other species included in the genus by
Beier (1954
,
1962
) have the following taxonomic changes:
We propose
Dasyscelidius minimus
(
Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1895
)
as
nomen dubium
. Unfortunately, the only known specimen of the species is lost. It was deposited in the Lübeck Museum (
Germany
), but its original description in Latin and its short diagnosis provided later by
Beier (1954)
in German is not informative, as the sample below translated into English: “small and delicate, yellowish-brown with darker spots, frons darkened, pronotum short, flat, densely and uniformly granulated, dorsally yellowish and laterally chestnut-brown; tegmina strongly reduced, in male not extending beyond first abdominal segment, touching in the midline, densely reticulated; sternum black; legs yellowish with dark mottling; all genicular lobes pointed; male cerci fairly long, styli very short” (
Cigliano
et al
., 2022
). Several
Pleminiini
and
Platyphyllini
brachypteran taxa have been described in recent years. However, genera and species of other tribes of
Pseudophyllinae
are also brachypterous (
Braun, 2002
; Cadena-Castañeda, 2011;
Cadena-Castañeda & Braun, 2011
; Cadena-Castañeda & Monzón, 2014;
Cadena-Castañeda
et al
., 2021
), and the characters specified by Beier are not enough to make a suitable identification. In addition, they coincide with several of the known Andean brachypterous species and many others that are still unknown to science.
FIGURE 1.
Dasyscelidius atrifrons
(
Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1895
)
Female holotype.
A.
Habitus in lateral view.
B.
Frons.
C.
Habitus in dorsal view.
D-F.
Terminalia:
D.
Dorsal.
E.
Lateral and
F.
Ventral views respectively. “© by Natural History Museum Vienna, NOaS Image Collection / H. Bruckner; published with permission.
Dasyscelidius brasiliensis
Beier, 1962
, does not fit the diagnostic characteristics of
Dasyscelidius
reviewed here, so it is necessary to include it in a new genus, described below.