Bambuina bambui: a new genus and species of cave cricket from Brazil (Orthoptera: Grylloidea: Phalangopsidae: Luzarinae)
Author
De Mello, Francisco De A. G.
Author
Horta, Lília S.
Author
Bolfarini, Marcio P.
text
Zootaxa
2013
3599
1
87
93
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.283225
9907a6f2-d959-4adc-a4db-39a495b2b4e2
1175-5326
283225
95AA2689-0FED-4D54-8F2A-AEE2E6215E4E
Bambuina bambui
de Mello, Horta & Bolfarini n. sp.
(Table I; figs. 1 to 25)
Etymology.
species named after the Brazilian speleology team "Grupo
Bambuí
de Pesquisas Espeleológicas", of which the second author of this article is a member.
Material examined:
Holotype
male,
Brazil
, MG, Mariana, Gruta do Centenário,
5-6/iv/1996
, L. S. Horta (leg.);
Paratypes
:
6 males
,
5 females
, same locality,
2-6/xi/1997
, same collector.
Repository:
Holotype
male,
2 male
,
4 female
paratypes
at Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo (
MZSP
);
4 male
,
3 female
paratypes
at the Entomological Collection, Botucatu Campus of São Paulo State University- UNESP-
Brazil
.
FIGURES 1–8.
Bambuina bambui
,
n. sp.
1, 2, anterior portion of male, dorsal and lateral respectively. 3, front view of male head. 4, right male tegmen, lateral. 5, left male tegmen, ventral. 6, male metanotum, dorsal. 7, male supra-anal plate, dorsal. 8, male subgenital plate, ventral.
FIGURES 9–14.
Bambuina bambui
,
n. sp.
9, 10, 11, phallic complex in dorsal, ventral and lateral views, respectively (distal pilosity of pseudpseudepiphallic spine omitted). 12, dorsal view of pseudpseudepiphallic parameres after removal of pseudpseudepiphallic spines. 13, 14, dorsal and lateral views of copulatory papilla. Conventions (after Desutter 1987, 1988, 1990): Ect. Ap.—ectophallic apodeme; Ect. Arc—ectophallic arc; Ect. F.—ectophallic fold; Ps. S.—pseudpseudepiphallic spine; Ps. P.—pseudpseudepiphallic paramere; Memb.—membrane. Terminology follows Desutter (1987, 1988, 1990).
Description. Male:
general coloration medium brown to light yellow (fig. 15); occiput light brown with four yellowish vittae, the two external ones incomplete, running half-way from edge of eyes towards hind margin of head (vittae indistinct in some specimens); antennal sockets broad and depressed, yellowish on dorsal and ventral surfaces but darker laterally; flagellum light brown, more than 3 times as long as body; gena light yellow; frons and vertex medium brown; clypeus light yellow, inflated; labrum nearly white (fig. 16); maxillary palpi light yellow, distal half of 5th joint whitish (fig. 19); external upper portion of mandibles nearly white. Pronotum saddle-shaped, the disk light yellow surrounded by a broad light brown band along the margins (fig. 15). Forewings mostly light brown but yellowish in the apical region and along the longitudinal vein (fig. 22). Metanotum and supra-anal plate yellowish, shaped as in figs. 6 and 7 respectively. Subgenital plate (figs. 8; 25) with a large whitish central area surrounded by light brown; remaining sternites nearly white. Legs I and II rather long, the color varying from nearly white to medium brown; leg III not especially long for the group. Phallic complex as in figs. 9 to 12. Female: rather similar to male; forewings reduced to a scale barely visible beyond pronotal margin; hind margin of supra-anal plate broadly concave with rounded angles; copulatory papilla as in figs. 13 and 14.
FIGURES 15–25.
Bambuina bambui
,
n. sp.
male. 15—dorsal view of body; 16—frontal view of head; 17—lateral view of head and pronotum; 18—perpendicular view of eye; 19—maxillary palpi; 20, 21—metanotum structure; 22—dorsal view of fore wings; 23—supra-anal plate; 24—metanotum structure, lateral view; 25—subgenital plate.
Discussion.
The elongated shape of male forewings and the presence of a glandular area at the tips of
Bambuina bambui
,
n. sp.
resemble some species of
Eidmanacris
(Chopard, 1956)
, but the rolled down condition of wing tips is an autapomorphy of the new genus.
The presence of a pair of dorso-lateral laminar pseudepiphallic spine in
Bambuina
is a condition shared with several other genera,
e.g.
,
Eidmanacris
;
Strinatia
Chopard, 1970
;
Endophallusia
de Mello, 1990;
Grandcolasia
Desutter-Grandcolas, 1992
(originally named
Smicrotes
);
Ottedana
de Mello & de
Andrade, 2003
and
Adenopygus
Bolfarini
& de Mello, 2012.
The reduced size and inconspicuousness of pseudepiphallic paramere I in
Bambuina
is also found in
Guabamima
de Mello, 1993 and
Mellopsis
Mews
et al.
, 2010
[in their article, the authors have misidentified the pseudepiphallic paramere I in
Mellopsis doucasae
,
Mellopsis zefae
(this last species clearly belonging to an undescribed genus that one of us- FAGM- have collected in
the States
of Espirito Santo and Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil
), and in the three species of
Guabamima
they have described]. As opposed to that, the pseudepiphallic paramere I is well developed and conspicuous in the following genera:
Bambuina
,
Eidmanacris
,
Endophallusia
,
Strinatia
,
Grandcolasia
,
Ottedana
and
Adenopygus
.
The hyper-development of pseudepiphallic paramere II is also shared by
Bambuina
,
Guabamima
and
Mellopsis doucasae
, as well as in more distanlty related genera like
Aracamby
de Mello, 1993;
Vanzoliniella
de Mello & Cesar dos Reis, 1994, and the incorrect
Mellopsis zefae
of
Mews
et al.
, 2010
.
In
Bambuina
,
Eidmanacris
,
Endophallusia
,
Grandcolasia
,
Strinatia
,
Ottedana
and
Adenopygus
, the endophallic sclerite is extremely variable in size but in all those genera, only a dorsal, lamelliform or crest-shaped apodeme is present (sometimes confined to the anterior extremity of the structure, as in
Eidmanacris
,
Endophallusia
and
Grandcolasia
). On the other hand, in
Guabamima
,
Mellopsis
, and in the undescribed new genus in which
Mews
et al.
, 2010
placed)
Mellopsis zefai
the endophallic sclerite has a pair of large antero-lateral apodemes, a very different condition than that in the former cases.
For more information on the phallic complexes of this group of crickets, see the discussion in de Mello & de
Andrade, 2003
.
Additional remarks.
One of us (LSH) observed these crickets during day and night time on the walls and floor of the cave, the latter being covered by meters of bird guano (
Apodidae
:
Streptoprocnes zonaris
and
S. biscutata
). Cricket specimens were found all over the cave but the relative abundance decreases in the aphotic zone, as well as the guano concentration.