Chorthippus dubius (Zubovski, 1898)

Vedenina, Varvara, Sevastianov, Nikita & Tarasova, Tatiana, 2020, Contributions to the study of the grasshopper (Orthoptera: Acrididae Gomphocerinae) courtship songs from Kazakhstan and adjacent territories, Zootaxa 4895 (4), pp. 505-527 : 520

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4895.4.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:002F9E9D-43AA-4CD3-89FB-FD41EEEE4B18

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4362353

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D81D4E-FFCE-0E17-FF4E-FC2E4DCF1D61

treatment provided by

Plazi (2020-12-18 09:54:54, last updated 2024-11-27 05:58:16)

scientific name

Chorthippus dubius (Zubovski, 1898)
status

 

Chorthippus dubius (Zubovski, 1898)

Distribution. South-eastern part of European Russia, Siberia, northern and eastern Kazakhstan, Mongolia, northern China.

Material. 18. Russia, Altai Republic, ab. 26 km SE of Ongudai, environs of Kupchegen’ , 50°37.3’ N, 86°26.2’ E, 922 m a.s.l., 08.08.2017, song recordings in 3 ³ GoogleMaps .

References to song. Bukhvalova & Zhantiev, 1994: recordings from Tyva, calling song; Benediktov, 2005: recordings from southern Siberia, calling song.

Song. The courtship song of Ch. dubius starts as an echeme similar to the calling song but lasting longer, up to 20 s. The echeme begins quietly, reaching maximum intensity in about 8–10 s (element 1, Fig. 12 A View FIGURE 12 ). The element 1 contains syllables repeated at the rate of about 6–7/s. The hind legs are almost synchronously moved up and down. During the gradual up-stroke the legs produce a soft noisy sound, whereas during the stepwise down-stroke the legs generate 5–6 loud pulses ( Fig. 12 D View FIGURE 12 ). This echeme can be repeated one-two times, and then 5–10 loud syllables of another temporal structure immediately follow (element 2, Fig. 12 C, E View FIGURE 12 ). They are repeated at the rate of about 13/s. In contrast to the element 1, the syllables of the element 2 are produced by gradual up- and down-strokes and do not contain distinct pulses. In about middle of the element 2, a male generates one high-amplitude stroke with the hind legs producing a syllable of dense pulses. The two elements can be repeated two–three times. The dominant frequencies of the spectrum lie between 20 and 40 kHz. The frequency spectrum of the element 1 has five clear harmonics in this band ( Fig. 12 F View FIGURE 12 ), whereas the harmonics are not so obvious on the spectrum of the element 2 ( Fig. 12 G View FIGURE 12 ).

Comparative remarks. The courtship song of Ch. dubius has been recorded for the first time.

Benediktov, A. A. (2005) Fauna and acoustic signals of grasshoppers of the genus Chorthippus Fieb. (Ortho-ptera, Acrididae) from southern Siberia. Trudy Russkogo Entomologicheskogo Obstshestva, 76, 118 - 130 [in Russian, English abstract]

Bukhvalova, M. A. & Zhantiev, R. D. (1994) Acoustic signals in grasshopper communities (Orthoptera, Acri-didae, Gomphocerinae). Entomological Review, 73 (2), 121 - 136.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 12. Oscillograms and frequency spectra of the courtship song of Chorthippus dubius from Altai. Song recordings are presented at three different speeds (faster oscillograms of the indicated parts of the songs shown in B–E). In all oscillograms the two upper lines are recordings of hind leg movements and the lower line is the sound recording. Different elements of the courtship song are indicated by numbers 1–2. Frequency spectra shown for the element 1 (F) and the element 2 (G).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

Family

Baissogryllidae

SubFamily

Gomphocerinae

Genus

Chorthippus