Pteroplistes silam Tan, Gorochov & Robillard, 2024

Tan, Ming Kai, Gorochov, Andrei, Japir, Razy, Chung, Arthur Y. C. & Robillard, Tony, 2024, New species of little-known crickets from the subfamily Pteroplistinae (Orthoptera, Grylloidea) from Sabah and contribution to their bioacoustics, Zootaxa 5506 (2), pp. 205-226 : 219-221

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5506.2.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8D2FAB83-6C2B-424E-BDA3-9EB430B9EDDC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13746662

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D15A244C-FFD1-3E13-0C95-FB06FC590193

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Pteroplistes silam Tan, Gorochov & Robillard
status

sp. nov.

Pteroplistes silam Tan, Gorochov & Robillard , sp. nov.

( Figs 2C View FIGURE 2 , 3C View FIGURE 3 , 4C View FIGURE 4 , 13 View FIGURE 13 , 14 View FIGURE 14 , 15A View FIGURE 15 )

Material examined. Holotype: EAST MALAYSIA: • ♂; Sabah State, Mount Silam, near Lahad Datu ; N4.96878, E118.17189, 736.1± 5.4 m.a.s.l.; calling on tree trunk; 12.v.2022, 21h56; M.K. Tan, T. Robillard & R. Japir leg.; SBH.22.42 ( FRC). GoogleMaps

Diagnosis. This species is most similar to Pteroplistes acinaceus Saussure, 1877 from Malay Peninsula and Pteroplistes bruneiensis Tan, Gorochov & Wahab, 2019 from Borneo in the ectophallic fold [rachis] of the male genitalia with a pair of rather large and sclerotized processes on its dorsal surface (dp) (before the apical part) but distinguished from them by these processes thickened, almost straight and with acute apices (these processes in P. acinaceus with characteristic hooks distally, and in P. bruneiensis , they are triangular). It is also similar to P. acinaceus , P. bruneiensis and Pteroplistes lagrecai by the shapes of the anal plate having a pair of small lobules (hooks), but differs from them by the lobules spaced widely apart (instead of nearly touching each other in P. bruneiensis and Pteroplistes lagrecai ) and with the apices of the lobules slightly enlarged (instead of tapering into acute apices in P. acinaceus ). The new species also differs from congeners from India ( Pteroplistes masinagudi , Pteroplistes kervasae and Pteroplistes platycleis ) by the head dorsum without distinct pale bands behind eyes, shapes of male anal plate and male genitalia.

Etymology. The species is named after Mount Silam, its type locality.

Description. Body distinctly dorsoventrally compressed, with head and pronotum finely pubescent. Head rostrum 1.3 times as wide as scape, with apex truncated ( Fig. 13A View FIGURE 13 ). Head wider than high in facial view ( Fig. 13C View FIGURE 13 ). Maxillary palps elongated, with apical segment widened apically and subequal to third segment in length, and with subapical segment longest and slightly broadened apically ( Fig. 13B View FIGURE 13 ). Eyes elongated in profile view, slightly protruding anteriorly ( Fig. 13B View FIGURE 13 ); median ocellus small and rounded; lateral ocelli larger and more elongated; fenestrae between scapes rounded, small like median ocellus ( Fig. 13C View FIGURE 13 ). Pronotal disc 1.3 times as wide as long, finely pubescent along anterior and posterior margins; anterior margin of disc concave; posterior margin of disc straight; lateral margins sub straight and parallel ( Fig. 13A View FIGURE 13 ). Pronotal lateral lobe 2.1 times as long as high, with ventral margin rising posteriorly ( Fig. 13B View FIGURE 13 ). TI with minute oval tympana on both sides; legs I and II generally pubescent (especially along ventral margin) and with a few stout setae usually located along dorsal margin, and their tarsus with a row of stout setae on ventral surface; FIII pubescent and flattened, without ventral spines; TIII also pubescent, with about 18 small and stout spines on each dorsal side, and with 2 long ventral apical spurs on inner margin and 4 shorter other apical spurs; hind basitarsus with about 7 inner and 7 outer denticles.

Male. Metanotal gland with two lateral areas cream coloured, broadly triangular and slightly raised ( Fig. 13A View FIGURE 13 ). FW extending beyond abdominal apex, with dorsal field slightly longer than lateral field ( Figs 13D, 13E View FIGURE 13 ); dorsal tegminal field ( Figs 13D, 13E View FIGURE 13 ) in harp area with 6 oblique veins, mostly almost straight and parallel (except for posterior one which slightly sinuous); mirror in this field large and rounded, as wide as long, with anterior margin roundly angular, with posterior margin somewhat more widely rounded, and with two parallel dividing veins (these dividing veins arcuate and located close to one another); apical field about as long as length of mirror, separated from mirror by distinctive transverse cell ( Figs 13D, 13E View FIGURE 13 ); lateral field wide, with about 20 branches of Sc and about 10 cross-veins (some veins faint) between R and M, as well as with R and M mostly parallel and strongly converging towards the apex ( Figs 13D, 13E View FIGURE 13 ). Hind wings slightly surpassing FWs. Anal plate broadly tongueshaped and slightly bilobed apically, with a pair of small lobules (hooks) in central part of dorsal surface but not very near each other; each of these lobules pointing inwards and tapering into subacute apex ( Fig. 13F View FIGURE 13 ). Subgenital plate trapezoidal, about as long as wide; anterior margin wide, tapers slightly posteriorly, and with posterior margin deeply emarginated.

Male genitalia as shown in Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 . Pseudepiphallus [epiphallus] almost H-shaped, with transverse but moderately long median bridge between lateral parts, moderately short posterolateral lobes and long anterolateral parts; pseudepiphallic lophi [posterolateral epiphallic lobes] lamellate, with inner margin strongly sclerotized and concave, with lateral margin distinctly convex, and with apical part forming small hook directed dorso-externally; median bridge (mb) in shape of parallelogram, with anterior margin 1.9 times as wide as long; anterolateral parts of pseudepiphallus lamellate, sinuate and divergent, anteriorly fused with rami. Ectophallic fold [rachis (= guiding rod)] very strongly sclerotized and directed almost perpendicularly downwards in relation to the longitudinal axis of genitalia, with distal half having anterior margin slightly convex, with apical third tapering into acute apex, with basal part having upper process (up) almost perpendicular to ectophallic fold (this process distally bifurcated into two short triangular lobes with subacute apices); dorsum of upper process with pair of dark lateral sclerites (dp) projecting laterally and posteriorly, these projections connect with ectophallic apodemes. Ectophallic apodemes [endoparameres] strongly sclerotized, slender, with middle parts almost touching each other, and with anterior parts in shape of long arcuate ribbons curved downwards and aside ( Fig. 14B View FIGURE 14 ). Endophallic sclerite [formula (= mold of spermatophore attachment plate)] consists of three small but elongated plates (a pair of lateral oblique plates and unpaired transverse one) as well as a pair of larger and longer but oblique and isolated plates in anteroventral parts of genitalia. Rami rather short and narrow, strongly (arcuately) curved, lamellate and with anterior end tapering almost into acute apex.

Measurements. • ♂ holotype: BL = 14.4; BWL = 18.8; HL = 1.9; PronL = 3.3; PronW = 4.5; FWL = 15.3; FWW = 6.6.

Ecology. This species was found calling on a tree trunk at night ( Fig. 15A View FIGURE 15 ).

Distribution. EAST MALAYSIA: Sabah: Mount Silam

Calling song ( Figs 2C View FIGURE 2 , 3C View FIGURE 3 , 4C View FIGURE 4 ). Consists of a trill made up of long syllables irregular spaced-apart. At 23.6°C, average syllable duration is 26.8±1.1 ms (25.6–29.7 ms) and average silent interval between consecutive syllables is 115.8±40.1 ms (89.8–249.2 ms). The frequency spectrum is pure-tonal and forms a clear harmonic series, with the energy peaking at a dominant fundamental frequency of 5.34 kHz.

FRC

Fusarium Research Center

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

SuperFamily

Grylloidea

Family

Pteroplistidae

SubFamily

Pteroplistinae

Genus

Pteroplistes

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