Leptophyes sicula

Kleukers, Roy M. J. C., Odé, Baudewijn & Fontana, Paolo, 2010, Two new cryptic Leptophyes species from southern Italy (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae), Zootaxa 2506, pp. 26-42 : 29-33

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.195953

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5677299

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/002B87F3-0733-FFBF-FF51-F925FE9F57C5

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Leptophyes sicula
status

 

Leptophyes sicula nov. spec.

Figs 3 View FIGURE 3 , 6 View FIGURE 6 a–g, 7a–j, 8a–c, 9h, 10h, 12g, 13d, 14d, 15d, 16h, 17d.

Material: Holotype: male, 30-V-1998, Italy: Sicily, Cava Grande del Cassabile, reared from nymph, P. Fontana, col. RMNH Leiden. Paratypes: 4 males and 1 female, same data, col. Fontana.

Recordings: Paolo Fontana, PF1998-2A: 11-13 (BF, holotype); PF1998-2B: 4 (AF, paratype).

Diagnosis: The male can be distinguished easily from L. albovittata , L. boscii , L. discoidalis and L. laticauda , by the shape of the cercus and, in the first three species, the length of the elytra. Of the remaining European Leptophyes species it is morphologically similar to L. lisae of Greece. The song, however is different, the syllable being unfragmented, while the syllable of L. lisae is broken into three fragments. It can be recognized from both L. punctatissima and L. calabra by the shape of the cercus, bulge at the hind edge of the elytron, form of the stridulatory file and the number of stridulatory teeth. The song is useful for the distinction with L. calabra (similar to the song of L. lisae ), but the song of L. punctatissima is similar tot that of L. sicula . A summary is given in table 1 and figure 13–16.

The female is different from L. boscii and L. discoidalis in the absence of the notch at the base of the ovipositor. The ovipositor is clearly longer than in L. albovittata and shorter than in L. laticauda . We found no clear distinguishing characters with L. punctatissima and L. lisae (the female of L. calabra is unknown). Heller & Willemse (1989) mention the size of the lateral pit of the ovipositor, body colour and the shape of the hind margin of the pronotum to separate L. lisae from L. punctatissima , but they also conclude that the distinction is often difficult.

Description. Male: Head with fastigium narrow. Pronotum quite flat, slightly upturned at the hind margin ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 a). Elytron more or less round, with a strong bulging at the hind margin ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 e), visible part of the elytron approximately the length of the pronotum ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 a). Stridulatory file with 110–124 teeth. In the basal part of the file the teeth are narrow and irregularly spaced, in the distal 2/3 part the teeth are broad and regularly spaced ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 g). Cercus slender and evenly curved, tapering into a sharp, dark point. The cercus somewhat constricted at 1/2 of its length ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 c). Subgenital plate long and narrow, extending beyond the tip of the cerci.

General colour in living animals light green, with numerous reddish-brown spots ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). Pronotum dorsally greenish with creme coloured margins. Elytron dorsally mostly brownish, with black stripe and green foremargin. In some specimens the region around the stridulatory file lighter than the surrounding area. Abdomen dorsally with red brown stripe.

Measurements (n = 5): body 13.7–15.2 mm, pronotum 2.4 mm, visible part elytron 2.7–3.2 mm, hind femur 13.6–15.1 mm.

Female: Head with fastigium narrow. Pronotum quite flat, not upturned at the hind margin ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 a). Visible part of the elytron approximately half of the length of the pronotum ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 b). Ovipositor evenly curved ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 c). General colour in living animals light green, with numerous reddish-brown spots ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 c). Pronotum dorsally greenish with crème coloured margins. Elytron dorsally mostly yellow-brown, with black stripe and green foremargin. Abdomen dorsally with red brown stripe.

Measurements (n = 1): body (without ovipositor) 17.6 mm, pronotum 3.2 mm, visible part elytron 1.9 mm, hind femur 16.8 mm, ovipositor 7.2 mm.

Sound: The song is a more or less regular repetition of a ticking sound, exceptionally broken in two fragments in close distance ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ). Analogous to other species of the genus it has to be regarded as a simple syllable, lasting about 40–50 ms. These syllables are repeated every 0,5–3 s. Although the resolution of the available recordings is not sufficient, it is clear that the syllable consists at least of about 8–15 pulses. A reliable frequency spectrum could not be established, as the available recordings do not include frequencies above 20 kHz.

Distribution: The species is only known from the type locality Cava Grande del Cassabile in the southeast of Sicily, south of the town of Siracusa in the Monti Iblei ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 d). Possibly all records of L. punctatissima of Sicily (summarized in Fontana et al. (2006)) refer to L. sicula , but this has to be investigated further.

Habitat: Many nymphs were observed on small shrubs and large herbs in dense Mediterranean macchia in the upper part of the deepest and largest gorge in Sicily (cava meaning gorge in Sicily).

Etymology: A noun in apposition. The species is named after the island Sicily where the only known locality is situated.

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

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