Cardiodactylus riga Otte, 2007a

Robillard, Tony & Yap, Sheryl, 2015, The Eneopterinae crickets from Leyte Island (Philippines) with description of two new species [Insecta: Orthoptera: Grylloidea: Gryllidae], Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 63, pp. 69-90 : 80-83

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5383818

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E4E2237B-2437-41E1-803F-007A37D3965F

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A88799-FFC8-9277-FC31-4B31FDA16A34

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Cardiodactylus riga Otte, 2007a
status

 

Cardiodactylus riga Otte, 2007a View in CoL

( Figs. 1 View Fig , 7G–I View Fig , 10E–H View Fig , 11C–E, 12C, D View Fig , 13D–F View Fig , 14B View Fig )

Cardiodactylus riga Otte, 2007a: 348 – 2007 View in CoL b: 30 (confirmation of depository). Eades et al., 2014 ( Orthoptera View in CoL Species File Online); Robillard et al., 2014: 86 View Cited Treatment (new signalisations).

Type material. Holotype (male): Philippines: male ( BPBM), Luzon, Camarines Sur, Mt. Iriga , 500–600 m, coll. H.M.Torrevillas, 3 April 1962 [not examined].

Material examined. Philippines: 1 male (TR1), day, call recording, sur bananier [on banana tree] (molecular sample C83) (MNHN-EO-ENSIF3352) , 1 male (TR35), day, sur bananier [on banana tree] ( UPLB-MNH), Leyte, Burauen, Buo , zone secondaire en bord de route [secondary area near road], 10°57’59.8”N 124°52’35.5”E, 108 m, coll. T. Robillard, March 2013 GoogleMaps . 1 male, 1 female ( MNHN), day, South Leyte, prox. Kuting Reef , forêt secondaire sur sol karstique [secondary forest on karstic soil], 11°48’48.7”N 124°18’57.3”E (10 m), coll. T. Robillard, August 2013 GoogleMaps .

Distribution. Central and southern Philippines, Luzon and Leyte islands ( Fig. 1 View Fig ).

Emended diagnosis. Species of average size, colouration contrasted, face yellow with 3 black spots, very similar in colouration and external morphology to C. empagatao , to which it differs by brown Sc vein (yellow in C. empagatao ), female venation yellow with dark brown cells and male genitalia bisinuated in profile view ( Fig. 13F View Fig ).

Redescription. In addition to the characters given by Otte (2007a: figs 17, 19): size average for the species group, colouration contrasted including yellow brown, dark brown, black and orange brown patterns. Head dorsum yellow brown with 3 dark brown bands including 2 wide lateral ones with an anterior notch not related to black colouration of fastigium, and a median punctuated band made of the fusion of two thin parallel bands; short triangular bands posterior to eyes slightly connected to lateral bands. Face yellow or light brown with 3 black spots, one in the middle of epistomal suture, and 2 between antennae; front part of fastigium usually with 2 small dark brown lines dorsally. Scapes yellow with basal dark brown patterns. Pronotum: Dorsal disk anterior part pale yellow, median area with 2 transverse symmetrical black patches, posterior area black. Lateral lobes pale, homogeneously yellow brown or cream, with a thin discontinuous dark line separating dorsal disks and lateral lobes. Legs I and II almost homogeneously orange brown. FIII homogeneously orange brown, tibiae and knees dark brown. Tarsomeres III-1 orange brown to dark brown. Cerci yellow brown, base faintly mottled with dark brown, apex with dark brown rings. Abdomen brown.

Male: FW colouration mostly dark brown to black (cells and veins), with a wide semicircular whitish region posterior to mirror and areas with vivid yellow veins including bases of anal veins, anterior part of 3A, harp veins and part of 1A and CuA close to harp veins, part of chord veins (2 inverted y-shape), and anterior part of diagonal vein. M/R area and cells dark brown. Sc dark brown, its apex yellow; projections of Sc and more ventral veins of lateral field yellow. FW venation ( Fig. 12C View Fig ): 1A almost not bisinuated. CuP absent. Harp with 2 w-shaped veins. Mirror area: mirror (d1) oval, separated in two parts near midlength; d2 area as wide as mirror but d2 not differentiated. Apical field with 4 cell alignments posterior to mirror (n = 2). Lateral field with 7-8 projections of Sc (n = 2) and 3 more ventral veins (n = 2).

Male genitalia ( Fig. 13D–F View Fig ): Pseudepiphallus elongate, shaped as a wide gutter, narrowed anteriorly and preapically, slightly asymmetrical; bisinuated in profile ( Fig. 13F View Fig ). Dorsal ridges showing 2 upper levels in lateral view, the most anterior level the most dorsal, carinated and bean-shaped, the preapical one forming convergent sclerotised blades. Pseudepiphallic sclerite with wide anterior expansions narrowed at midlength and parallel, membrane between them setose. Posterior pseudepiphallic apex rounded, with a rounded translucent area. Ectophallic arc complete, v-shaped. Ectophallic fold with thin lateral sclerites; apex trilobate, membranous, median lobe oval. Base of ectophallic apodemes with a short ventroanterior sclerotisation. Endophallic sclerite small. Endophallic apodeme with a dorsal crest and lateral lamellas. Membrane of endophallic cavity smooth.

Female: FW ( Fig. 12D View Fig ) dark brown with contrasted yellow veins; base whitish with a whitish area at FW midlength external margin. Lateral field: M/R/Sc areas dark brown to black; Sc dark brown, its projections and more ventral veins yellow. FW venation: dorsal field with 15 strong longitudinal veins; Sc with 8 projections and 3 more ventral veins. Ovipositor of similar size as FIII; apex not denticulate on dorsal and ventral edges ( Fig. 14C View Fig ).

Female genitalia ( Fig. 7G–I View Fig ): Copulatory papilla triangular, longer than wide, with 2 baso-lateral sclerites; apex rounded and little sclerotised, folded ventrally.

Juvenile: Colouration of head and legs close to that of adults; body light brown mottled with dark brown.

Variation. The observed males from Leyte differ slightly from the photographs of HT in terms of male genitalia. In particular, the pseudepiphallus seems longer in the observed specimens; this could be due to the photographs of HT in Otte (2007a) or to geographic or individual variation.

Habitat and life history traits. Cardiodactylus riga was encountered in Leyte in secondary areas in banana trees along the roads and in secondary habitats in coastal areas, mostly on large rocks. They are not strictly nocturnal since the calling song occurs from late afternoon and continues at night. Couples were heard and observed mating during afternoon, between leaves of banana trees or on large stones.

Behaviour. Calling song ( Fig. 16 View Fig ): Cardiodactylus riga has a long mono-syllabic calling song. At 27.5°C, the calling songs show a very indented amplitude profile. Syllables have the following characteristics: syllable duration = 262.1 ± 6.0 ms; syllable period = 6.3 ± 1.4 s; syllable duty cycle = 4.2%. The power spectrum shows no clear harmonic pattern and dominant frequency of 14.29 ± 0.19 kHz.

BPBM

Bishop Museum

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

Family

Gryllidae

Genus

Cardiodactylus

Loc

Cardiodactylus riga Otte, 2007a

Robillard, Tony & Yap, Sheryl 2015
2015
Loc

Cardiodactylus riga Otte, 2007a: 348 – 2007

Robillard T & Gorochov AV & Poulain S & Suhardjono YR 2014: 86
Otte D 2007: 2007
2007
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF