Nahlaksia bidadari, Ingrisch & Tan, 2012
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5347125 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5449221 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C3A86F-FFE4-FFC4-FF53-A86B747CF852 |
treatment provided by |
Tatiana |
scientific name |
Nahlaksia bidadari |
status |
sp. nov. |
Nahlaksia bidadari View in CoL , new species
( Figs. 1–3 View Fig View Fig View Fig )
Material examined. — Holotype: male ( ZRC), Singapore, MacRitchie Reservoir Catchment Area , along Lornie Trail, coll. M. K. Tan, 24 Feb.2011 . Paratypes: Singapore, 2 males ( ZRC), CCNR, Mandai Reservoir, coll. D. H. Murphy, 20 Nov.1967 ; 2 females, 1 male ( ZRC), CCNR, along Mandai Track 15, Upper Seletar Trail and Chestnut Track , coll. M. K. Tan, M. R. B. Ismail, H. P. M. Woo, 19 Dec.2010, 29 Jan.2011 ; 2 females ( ZRC), MacRitchie Reservoir Catchment Area, along Sime Track and MacRitchie Nature Trail , coll. M. K. Tan, M. R. B. Ismail, T. M. Leong, 26 Nov.2010, 2 Feb.2011 ; 1 male ( ZRC), BTNR, along Belukar Track, coll. M. K. Tan, 5 Feb.2011 ; Malaysia: 2 females ( MNHN), Pahang (?), Kg. [Kampung] Bongsu, coll. H. Steiner, 2 May 1996, 24 Jul.1996 .
Diagnosis. — Similar to N. suphattra , but differs by the frons that is not divided by a transverse line below compound eyes and antennal scrobae and uniformly black instead of black and red, the hind femur is without black spot or whitish, pregenicular ring, the male tenth abdominal tergite with larger, stouter and little twisted apical lobes, the male cerci have the basal projection stouter with subacute tip and the apical lobe wider with spinule at tip, the titillators have the apex rounded instead of subacute. Further differences are found in the male subgenital plate having shorter and widely separated apical lobes and longer styli, and in the female subgenital plate having regular convex lateral margins and a roundly excised apex.
Description. — Fastigium verticis conical but step-like inclined in circa half of length, with lateral ocelli projecting laterad; apex sub-obtuse; dorsal surface furrowed and without a tubercle near base; ventral surface with medial carinula. Fastigium frontis with one or two tubercles in midline. Frons rugose and setose; only immediately below antennal scrobae furrowed and smooth ( Fig. 1B View Fig ). Fastigium verticis and vertex in anterior area rugose; vertex otherwise subsmooth but with some impressed dots. Pronotum rugose, rather short, regularly curved from one side to the other; transverse sulcus weak, interrupted in middle, a second transverse sulcus on paranota and angles; anterior margin broadly rounded, slightly concave at both sides; posterior margin concave; paranota longer than high, ventral margin subsinuate, anterior angle rounded, posterior angle circa rectangular but angle itself rounded; humeral sinus absent. Tegmen: Male micropterous ( Fig. 1C View Fig ), female squamipterous ( Fig. 1E View Fig ). Prosternum unarmed, with two minute tubercles at posterior margin; meso- and metasternal lobes rounded. Femora, especially mesofemur, compressed and widened in basal area; mesotibia compressed and widened. Legs setose. Profemur with spines on both ventral margins, meso- and postfemur on ventro-external margin; sometimes with one spine on ventro-internal margin of mesofemur. Knee lobes of all femora rounded on external, spinose on internal side; spine on mesofemur shorter than on pro- and postfemur or lobe triangular without spine. Protibia distinctly angular. Femora with the following number of spines on ventral margins: profemur 3–4 external, 3–5 internal; mesofemur 4–6 external, 0 internal; postfemur 5–8 external.
Male: Stridulatory file on underside of left tegmen about 1.0 mm long with teeth gradually getting denser from base to apex; in basal half with about 44, in centre with about 54 teeth per 0.5 mm ( Fig. 2A View Fig ). Tenth abdominal tergite elongate with a pair of large roughly triangular apical lobes with convex surface and downcurved medial margin ( Fig. 2C View Fig ). Epiproct hidden under prolongation of tenth abdominal tergite, tongue-shaped with faint medial furrow ( Fig. 2D View Fig ). Cerci conical in external view but little compressed laterally and internal surface flattened, apical area bent ventrad and compressed, apex obtuse, with a spinule a little externally of tip ( Fig. 2B View Fig ); cercus at base with a stout conical dorsointernal projection with subacute apex ( Fig. 2D View Fig ). Subgenital plate with apex extended into two short, narrow lobes, wide roundly excised in between; styli long, inserting at apex of projections ( Fig. 2E View Fig ). Titillators simple, weakly sclerotised, hyaline along lateral margins; apical area compressed with granular surface; sclerotised central ligament widening towards rounded apex ( Fig. 2F View Fig ).
Female: Tenth abdominal tergite with a very faint carinula in midline, apical margin faintly bilobate in middle, otherwise subtruncate. Epiproct rounded-triangular with medial furrow that is little widening apically. Cerci conical, apex pointing. Subgenital plate curved from one side to other, lateral margins convex, converging posteriorly, apex roundedly excised in middle ( Fig. 1F View Fig ). Ovipositor curved, elongate; margins smooth, dorsal valves furrowed ( Fig. 1G View Fig ).
Colouration: Ochre or brown with irregular light and dark pattern; with or without few green spots. Frons including fastigium frontis and antennal scrobae black ( Fig. 1B View Fig ); sometimes less dark in middle; mouthparts reddish or brown; labrum partly orange; palpi brown, apices of most segments pale; antennae brown with spaced white annulation, first two segments with black marks. Hind area of genae brown; compound eyes light; ventral margin and a spot near scapus black. Vertex and pronotum brown with various shades of a dark and light pattern, sometimes infumate with green pattern. Tergites ochre, medium or dark brown with small light dots that partly merge to form larger spots; with fairly distinct dark medial band; sternites yellow mottled with brown or dark or reddish brown; thoracic sternites can be nearly blackish brown. Legs with various shades of brown and marbled with whitish dots of variable size; ventro-internal lobes of meso- and metacoxa nearly white, sometimes indistinct; ventral areas of all femora reddish brown, darker towards tronchanter; tronchanter dark reddish brown; very base of tibiae black or dark brown, spines whitish with dark tips; hind femur reddish brown, sometimes with light dots on outer face; dorsal areas of profemur, protibia, mesotibia, posttibia can additionally become infumate with a green pattern, sometimes indistinct. Ovipositor dark reddish brown apically, lighter reddish brown basally.
Measurements (5 males, 6 females): Body: male 18.2–22.1, female 19.0–22.1; pronotum: male 4.5–5.7, female 5.4–5.7; tegmen: male 1.9–2.9, female 0.5–1.5; hind femur: male 8.4–9.6, female 10.1–10.8; ovipositor: female 11.6–12.8; ovipositor height: female 1.5–1.7 mm.
Etymology. — The species is named after the exhumed Bidadari cemetery, Singapore; noun in apposition. “Bidadari” also implies “nymph”. Adults may be easily mistaken as nymphs due to the strongly abbreviated wings.
Biology. — In Singapore, this species appears to be restricted to the Central Catchment Nature Reserve and Bukit Timah Nature Reserve. Adults and nymphs were found mainly on dead branches of felled trees and climbers. A female nymph was collected from a branch of Willughbeia coriacea Wallich & G.Don, 1832 along Upper Seletar Trail on the night of 20 Jan.2011. It was reared in captivity to study the biology of the species ( Fig. 3A View Fig ). The nymph was observed to take shelter within a hollow dead branch and crevices during daytime or when disturbed ( Fig. 3B View Fig ). Upon disturbance, it moved backwards into the hollow, abdominal apex first ( Fig. 3C View Fig ). Initially, antennae remained in sight ( Fig. 3D View Fig ). After some time, the antennae were retracted into the hollow. In the dark, the nymph was observed to feed on wood of dead branches ( Fig. 3E View Fig ). It did not forage leaf litter. Instead, it tends to dwell among branches at higher ground. The last instar nymph had a striking black spot on the hind femur that disappeared with the final moult.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.