Dry leaf or twig mantis? A new genus and species of Acanthopidae with sexually dimorphic cryptic strategies (Insecta: Mantodea)
Author
Agudelo, Antonio A.
Author
Maldaner, Caroline
Author
Rafael, José A.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-02-25
4560
2
331
344
journal article
27418
10.11646/zootaxa.4560.2.6
eb1ba75d-e187-4213-a415-2e4def3001f3
1175-5326
2627707
C9DEC044-A0B0-446F-9DC3-6EF828C3FB9D
Metacanthops
Agudelo & Maldaner
gen. n.
Type
species:
Acanthops amazonica
Beier, 1930
Diagnosis:
Male habitus similar to that of
Metilia
, but entirely brown. Body length
23–35 mm
. Males resembling a dry leaf, whereas females resemble a twig. Eyes slightly conical, with a small, apical wart. Vertex with arched apex, higher than eyes, and tuberculated in females. Head and pronotum smooth in males, with multiple tubercles in females. Prothoracic femora with 6 posteroventral spines, rarely with 5 or 7 on one femur. Prothoracic tibiae with 20–21 posteroventral spines with darkened apex, and 15–17 anteroventral spines. Mesothoracic wings shorter than metathoracic ones at resting, both are longer than abdomen in males but shorter in females, costal vein sinuous and excavated in the male. Lateral abdominal expansions of males of moderate size, in general, both sexes lack prominent lobes. Cerci cylindrical, distal cercomere conical, with a concave area dorsally.
Etymology
:
Metacanthops
is a name with an intentionally ambiguous origin, resulting from the fusion of the Greek prefix
meta
= µετά, meaning
beyond
, and
Acanthops
, genus to which the species was initially assigned. The generic epithet also results from the fusion of “
Met
” (in reference to
Metilia
), and
Acanthops
.
FIGURES 1–4.
Cryptic strategies in
Acanthopidae
: 1,
Metilia
sp., a male with partially decaying, dry-leaf habitus (specimen from Novo Airão, Amazonas State, Brazil—Photo by Antonio Agudelo); 2:
Metilia
sp., a female with partially decaying, dryleaf habitus (specimen from Ecuador—Photo by Andreas Key); 3,
Metacanthops fuscum
(
n. sp.
), a male with fully dry-leaf habitus (specimen from Reserva Cuieiras, ZF2, Manaus, Amazonas State, Brazil—Photo by Antonio Agudelo); 4,
Pseudacanthops
sp., a female resembling a lichenous twig (specimen from Manaus, Amazonas State, Brazil—Photo by Antonio Agudelo).
Remarks.
Metacanthops
differs from
Metilia
in having uniformly brown forewings, whereas the same in
Metilia
vary from dark green to yellow. However, it is in the head where conspicuous differences between
Metacanthops
and
Metilia
, and between them and
Acanthops
can be observed (
Figs. 13–22
). For instance, the compound eyes of
Metacanthops
are only slightly conical and bear a small apical wart, whereas the same in
Metilia
and
Acanthops
are strongly conical with a more developed apical wart; the vertex of
Metacanthops
rises above the compound eyes, in the males it has distinct undulations in its central area and conspicuous juxtaocular process in females (
Figs. 14–17
), whereas in
Metilia
and
Acanthops
these features are missing.
Metacanthops
has a robust and tuberculated pronotum, but in
Metilia
the same is relatively narrower and smooth (
Figs. 18, 19
). The number of forefemoral posteroventral spines apparently constitutes a good diagnostic character in this case, as we consistently found 6 spines in all studied specimens of
Metacanthops
(however, in few rare cases some specimens have 5 or
7 in
only one of their prothoracic legs), whereas we consistently found 7 forefemoral posteroventral spines across all specimens of
Metilia
(unpublished data). In addition, the margins of tergites V and VI are slightly prominent and rectangular in
Metacanthops
, whereas in
Metilia
they are dilated, semicircular or subtriangular.
The reliability of certain characters to separate acanthopid genera, such as vertex features, wing shape, abdominal appendages and, particularly, the number of forefemoral spines, have been a matter of controversy (
Chopard 1916
;
Giglio-Tos 1927
;
Rehn 1935
;
Terra 1995
;
Roy 2002
).
Chopard (1916)
considered that the diagnostic characters of
Plesiacanthops
,
Metilia
,
Decimiana
, were all of little relevance for making such distinction, and thus he considered these genera merely as "subdivisions" of
Acanthops
. However,
Giglio-Tos (1927)
and
Rehn (1935)
considered that those characters were valid because they are commonly used at genuslevel in other mantodean taxa.
Roy (2002)
recently revisited this issue and suggested that the differentiation between
Metilia
and
Acanthops
cannot be justified based on the number of forefemoral posteroventral spines. For instance, he argued that
Acanthops tuberculata
has 7 posteroventral spines, unlike the rest of species in the genus with only 6 spines, whereas
A. amazonica
(which normally presents 6, but males sometimes having 5 or
8 in
either forefemur) should be transferred to
Metilia
, whose species also have 7 spines. Although we agree with
Roy (2002)
in that
amazonica
is not a member of
Acanthops
, the newly available evidence suggest that its placement among
Metilia
should be reconsidered. Accordingly, we now formally transfer
Acanthops amazonica
Beier, 1930
to
Metacanthops
.