Physocrobylus venetus, Hemp, 2021

Hemp, Claudia, 2021, A new species of Physocrobylus (Caelifera: Acridoidea: Acrididae: Coptacrinae), with notes on the phenology and habitat of the genus, Journal of Orthoptera Research 30 (1), pp. 1-6 : 1-3

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jor.30.53375

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CAAD742E-022D-43C7-A643-DC09BA3CB568

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C43E2622-D643-483E-8E81-E0C8E34EAAD0

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:C43E2622-D643-483E-8E81-E0C8E34EAAD0

treatment provided by

Journal of Orthoptera Research by Pensoft

scientific name

Physocrobylus venetus
status

sp. nov.

Physocrobylus venetus sp. nov.

Type material. -

Holotype male. Tanzania, Nguru Mountains, submontane forest, 1100-1200 m, 6.05336°S, 37.56076°E - 6.06702°S, 37.57339°E. June 2017. Depository: CCH.

Paratypes. 11 males, 13 females, 3 female nymphs, same data as holotype and February 2017, March 2017, November 2017, January 2018, March 2019, and March 2020. Depository: CCH.

1 male (NHML 013454600), 1 female (NHML 013454558), same data as holotype. Depository: NHML.

Description. -

Male. General coloration: Dorsally broad brown fascia running over head, pronotum, and abdomen; this brown fascia medially with three fine white lines, interrupted at each segment; end of abdomen light brown and white lines obsolete. Eyes reddish. Legs green, hind knees dark, tibiae bright blue ( Fig. 1A-C View Fig. 1 ).

Head and antennae. Antenna about body length or slightly shorter; antennal segments much longer than wide. Eyes globular, strongly protruding. Fastigium verticis very narrow between eyes, appears only as a callous ridge; in front of eyes widening to rhomboid structure ( Fig. 2A View Fig. 2 ). Frontal ridge typical for genus, strongly projecting in front of eyes; shallow concave and punctured; carinae below the ocellus flat and almost obsolete.

Thorax. Thorax strongly wrinkled and impressed with dots, deeply crossed by two sulci; lateral carinae absent. Anterior margin evenly rounded; posterior margin medially incurved ( Fig. 2A View Fig. 2 ). Prosternal tubercle conical, laterally compressed. Tegmina strongly reduced, elongate lobes with narrow anterior part, slightly widening posteriorly, broadly rounded and with reduced venation ( Fig. 3C View Fig. 3 ). Alae absent.

Legs. Fore and mid femora round, with largest diameter in the middle; unarmed. Hind femora stout; unarmed. Fore and mid tibiae also roundish, unarmed except for black spurs; fore tibiae with three outer and two inner spurs, mid tibiae each with an outer and an inner pair of spurs. Hind tibiae with double row of dorsal long spines, white at the base, with black tips; on inner side, two large and laterally flattened spurs, on outer side, a pair of smaller but also enlarged stout spurs. Tarsi of light color; mid tarsal segment very short, the other two segments about 3 times as long as the middle one.

Abdomen. Supra-anal plate typical for Coptacrinae , elongate, tongue-like with elevated lateral margins and a rounded tip ( Fig. 4C View Fig. 4 ). Furcula of 10th abdominal tergite well developed. Cerci slightly longer than supra-anal plate; inwardly curved and laterally slightly compressed. Subgenital plate with well-developed transverse fold. Epiphallus as in Fig. 5 View Fig. 5 . Bridge divided ( Fig. 5A View Fig. 5 ), lophi curved, almost tri-angular with acute apices ( Fig. 5C, D View Fig. 5 ), posterior processes narrow and elongated with rounded apices, anterior processes rounded ( Fig. 5A View Fig. 5 ). Ancorae well developed ( Fig. 5A View Fig. 5 ).

Female. Coloration similar to male but duller and also with bright blue hind tibiae. Larger and stouter but with same spination of the legs ( Fig. 1D View Fig. 1 , Fig. 2C View Fig. 2 ). Supra-anal plate elongate, anterior part sculptured ( Fig. 6A View Fig. 6 ). Subgenital plate broad with acute tip at posterior margin ( Fig. 6B View Fig. 5 ).

Measurements. -

(mm) Males (n = 6). Body length: 14.7-16.7; Median length of pronotum: 2.5-3.4; length of tegmina: 3.1-3.7; length of hind femur: 10.1-11.2.

Females (n = 6). Body length: 20.1-22.0; Median length of pronotum: 3.7-4.2; length of tegmina: 3.5-4.3; length of hind femur: 14.0-14.5.

Diagnosis.-In habitus and size, P. venetus sp. nov. is similar to P. tessa from the East Usambara Mountains but is less stout, while P. burtti is smaller and very stout ( Fig. 7 View Fig. 7 ). Pronotum posteriorly not as wide as in P. tessa . Also, the coloration of P. venetus sp. nov. differs from both other Physocrobylus species. The femora are bright green in P. venetus sp. nov. while they are brown or speckled brown in the other two species, although specimens of P. tessa from the Nilo Forest Reserve population can also have partly dark green legs or speckled green legs ( Fig. 7 View Fig. 7 ). Easily distinguished also by the bright blue tibiae in both sexes of P. venetus sp. nov., while P. tessa has brown to green hind tibiae and P. burtti has brown tibiae in both sexes. The tegmina in males of the three species are of similar shape, all reduced to elongate lobes with reduced venation ( Fig. 3 View Fig. 3 ). However, P. tessa has slightly broader tegmina compared to the other two species. Differences are also found in the outer genitalic morphology of the males ( Fig. 4 View Fig. 4 ). The male cerci of P. burtti are thick and rugose in the basal half with tips round and marked darker brown to black. The cerci of both P. tessa and P. venetus sp. nov. are laterally compressed, especially in the apical half, and darker to black at their tips. All three species have differently shaped epiphalli (see fig. 1d, e in Hochkirch (1996), figs 5-7 in Jago (1978) and fig. 5). Similar to P. tessa , the ectophallus has two sclerotized ridges.

Etymology. -

From latin: - Physocrobylus venetus = green, blue-green, because of the blue tibiae and partly green body and legs.

Distribution. -

Tanzania, Nguru Mountains.

Notes on the habitat of Physocrobylus species. -

Both P. venetus sp. nov. and P. tessa occur in submontane forests in the litter layer and on low herbs; they are, however, restricted to different mountain areas. P. tessa is a rather rare species in submontane and montane elevations in the East Usambara Mountains. Most adults are found from November until about April. In the East Usambara Mountains, several forest reserves offer protection for some of the last lowland wet forests in eastern Africa. Numerous individuals were collected in Magoroto Forest Estate at elevations between 670 to 880 m a.s.l., indicating that lowland wet forests harbor higher numbers of this forest dwelling species, and in the Nilo Forest Reserve. In the latter, single individuals were even collected in July, indicating that the species may be present year-round. Very few individuals of P. tessa have been found so far at Kwamkoro Forest Reserve on the plateau of the East Usambara Mountains near Amani at elevations of around 900 m, although the area was surveyed for P. tessa many times and at different times of the year. The Nguru Mountains have been deforested below about 700 m, thus only submontane and montane forests still exist in this area. Specimens of P. venetus sp. nov. are more common during the warm time of the year, from about November to April, but individuals were also collected in June and July. Thus, the phenology is similar to P. tessa in the East Usambara Mountains.

Little information is available for the third species, P. burtti . Although the area where P. burtti occurs was visited several times (Hemp and Heller 2019), this species was not collected by our team. The holotype was collected in the Mpwapwa area of Tanzania, but detailed information of the habitat is lacking. The type locality at the Kiboriani Hills where the District city of Mpwapwa is located has transformed almost completely to maize fields (see also Hemp and Heller 2019) but formerly was covered by Miombo woodlands. P. burtti was also collected 44 miles north of Dodoma, in the East Chenene Forest Reserve, which is also the type locality for other species (e.g., Odonturoides insolitus Ragge, 1980). This forest reserve, today heavily impacted by illegal charcoaling, consists of typical Miombo woodlands at elevations between 1200 and 1550 m a.s.l. Thus, P. burtti probably is a dweller of the ground layer in this forest type and, thus, occupies a completely different ecological niche than the other two Physocrobylus species, which prefer moister habitats.