Gibbopromachus, Hennemann, 2021

Hennemann, Frank H., 2021, Stick insects of Sulawesi, Peleng and the Sula Islands, Indonesia- a review including checklists of species and descriptions of new taxa (Insecta: Phasmatodea), Zootaxa 5073 (1), pp. 1-189 : 28-30

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5073.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AA3269D1-CA2F-4528-BC9D-3A4C75D05BD9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5760626

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DB87EE-FFEA-9D4A-FF40-5F05FB29F6AE

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gibbopromachus
status

gen. nov.

Genus Gibbopromachus n. gen.

( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 )

Type-species: Pericentrus tripinnatus Redtenbacher, 1998: 352 , by present designation.

Pericentrus Redtenbacher, 1908: 352 (in part).

Brock, 1998: 63.

Hennemann, 1998: 119.

Otte & Brock, 2005: 259.

Neopromachus, Günther, 1938: 58 , 82 (in part).

Diagnosis: ♀ ( Fig.12 View FIGURE 12 ). Fairly small (body length 78.0 mm) and stocky Lonchodinae with very prominent body armature, a strongly swollen mesothorax and a bird-beak like ovipositor. General colour brown with a reddish longitudinal median stripe along most of dorsal body surface. Head and entire body armed with large and strong but obtuse spines of variable sizes ( Figs. 12A–B View FIGURE 12 ). Head slightly longer than wide, globose with the vertex roundly convex and armed with several prominent coronal spines; another strong pair of spines on frons. Antennae slender, reaching to abdominal segment II and consisting of about 35 antennomeres; scapus compressed dorsoventrally and somewhat deflexed laterally, pedicellus cylindrical, following increasing in length, the antennomeres in median section of antennae extremely elongated, the apical ten or so suddenly much shorter. Antennomere XIV with a shiny, knob-like sub-basal dorsal swelling; the elongated median antennomeres with apex thickened and gently curved. Pronotum notably shorter and narrower than head with a prominent, impressed transverse sulcus and at least a pair of strong spines in posterior half. Mesothorax almost 4x longer than prothorax, gently down-curving, very strongly swollen medially with the mesonotum very prominently raised and humped ( Figs. 12A–B View FIGURE 12 ). Mesonotum armed with numerous very strong spines, mesopleurae with a marginal row of strong spines and a strong supra-coxal spine. Metanotum roughly 1/3 the length of mesonotum, about 1.6x longer than wide, almost rectangular and almost 2x longer than median segment; armed with two paired spines. Metapleurae principally like mesopleurae. Meso- and metasternum with several strong but short, paired spines. Abdomen longer than head and thorax combined. Median segment somewhat transverse. Segments II – VI decreasing, VII and VIII increasing in length. Terga II and VII with four spines, III – VII with the lateral margins deflexed into a large, almost semi-circular lobe and armed with six spines ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ). All terga with a fine, longitudinal median carina. Sterna with paired spines, VII with Preopercular organ formed by two obtusely rounded swellings ( Fig. 12E View FIGURE 12 ). Terga VIII and IX with an obtuse posteromedian hump. Anal segment strongly narrowed and declining in lateral aspect ( Fig. 12C View FIGURE 12 ), the apex strongly elongated into a very long and straight, lanceolate projection (apex broken in the unique holotype, Fig. 12D View FIGURE 12 ). Cerci very small, conical and gently compressed dorsoventrally. Epiproct very small, triangular and also concealed under apical projection of anal segment. Subgenital plate convex, strongly keeled longitudinally, bulgy in median portion ( Fig. 12 C View FIGURE 12 ) and with apex elongated into a lanceolate projection, that is not reaching the apex of the anal segment; apex obtusely angular ( Fig. 12E View FIGURE 12 ). Legs long and moderately slender, profemora a little longer than mesothorax, mesofemora slightly shorter than mesothorax and metafemora reaching to abdominal segment VI. Profemora strongly compressed and curved basally. All femora trapezoidal in cross-section, distinctly carinate and on two outer carinae and posterodorsal carina with a prominent triangular lobe sub-apically. Medioventral carina obtuse. All tibiae slender and longer than corresponding femora, unarmed except for a distinct, rounded sub-basal lobe on medioventral carina. Basitarsi long and slender, somewhat longer than combined length of all remaining tarsomeres .

Egg ( Figs. 12F–G View FIGURE 12 ): The unique egg available from the ovipositor of the holotype of G. tripinnatus (Redtenbacher, 1908) n. comb. lacks the operculum. Moderately sized (length 3.5 mm), ovoid about 1.7x longer than wide, notably higher than wide and oval in cross-section; the polar end slightly narrowed. Capsule surface minutely and evenly punctured, slightly glossy. General colour flecked with dull ochre and mid brown. Micropylar plate very elongate with anterior half parallel-sided and posterior half gently widened; covering more than ¾ the length of capsule. Micropylar cup small but well defined and placed some distance off posterior end in a narrow posteromedian gap of plate. Median line almost obsolete.

Differential diagnosis: Numerous morphological characters suggest close relation to the principally New Guinean genus Neopromachus Giglio-Tos, 1912 , which also has a few representatives on the very eastern islands of Wallacea (e.g. Aru Islands) but east of Weber’s line; this is mainly the prominent spination of the head and body, as well as the bird-beak like secondary ovipositor of ♀♀. Females of this new genus, the only sex known, however differ from those of Neopromachus by the laterally lobed abdominal terga II–VII, strongly swollen and gibbose mesonotum, angular apex of the subgenital plate ( Fig. 12E View FIGURE 12 ), considerably longer basitarsi that are longer than the corresponding remaining tarsomeres taken together and extremely elongated median antennomeres. Moreover, the egg is more ovoid and notably less elongate than all known eggs of Neopromachus . Within the Sulawesian fauna, the beak-like ovipositor resembles Paramanduria n. gen., but the strong body armature, more globose head, strongly swollen mesonotum and lateral lobes of the abdominal terga readily distinguish this new genus. The strong body armature resembles Acanthomenexenus Brock & Hennemann, 2009 , but Gibbopromachus n. gen. readily differs from that genus by the morphology of the terminalia.

Comments: The true relationships of this striking new genus are still not fully known and require knowledge of the still unknown ♂♂. Redtenbacher (1908: 352) originally placed this species in the genus Pericentrus Redtenbacher, 1908 , which however is not closely related and geographically restricted to northern India and Bhutan. A discussion of and redescription of Pericentrus was presented by Hennemann, Conle & Zhang (2008: 51), who already assumed close relation to Neopromachus Giglio-Tos, 1912 .

Etymology: The name is a combination of “ gibbus ” (lat. = hump) and “ promachus ” from the visually very similar looking genus Neopromachus Giglio-Tos, 1912 . Masculine.

Distribution: Sulawesi (endemic).

Species included:

1. Gibbopromachus tripinnatus (Redtenbacher, 1908: 352) [ Pericentrus ]. HT, ♀: Coll. Br. v. W., Celebes, Dr. Sarasin; Lowu Mtne c. 700 m; Pericentrus 3-pinnatus Redt.; det. Redtenb. Pericentrus tripinnatus [NHMW, No. 713]. n. comb.

Distribution: NE-Sulawesi, Prov. Sulawesi Utara, Mount Lowu 700m [NHMW]; NE-Sulawesi, Minahasa, Gunung Sudara summit [NHMB].

Genus Hermagoras Stål, 1875

( Figs. 13 View FIGURE 13 , 68A View FIGURE 68 )

Type-species: Lonchodes personatus Bates, 1865: 336 , pl. 44: 7 [= H. foliopeda (Olivier, 1792) ], by subsequent designation of Kirby, 1904: 322.

Comments: This genus has five known species on Borneo and is represented throughout the southeastern regions of Wallacea by the type-species H. foliopeda (Olivier, 1792) . On Sulawesi it is represented by one species, which was formerly regarded a subspecies of H. foliopeda but is here raised to species level. The distinction between Hermagoras and the morphologically very similar Mnesilochus Stål, 1877 presented by Seow-Choen (2016: 279) is partly based on a misinterpreted character and is clarified in the comments on Mnesilochus below.

VI

Mykotektet, National Veterinary Institute

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Phasmida

Family

Heteropterygidae

Loc

Gibbopromachus

Hennemann, Frank H. 2021
2021
Loc

Neopromachus, Günther, 1938: 58

Gunther, K. 1938: 58
1938
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF