Gwynnagraecia Rentz, Su and Ueshima, 2021

Rentz, Dcf, Su, You Ning & Ueshima, Norihiro, 2021, Studies in Australian Tettigoniidae: New short-winged Agraeciini from Australia (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae; Conocephalinae; Agraeciini), Zootaxa 5059 (2), pp. 1-72 : 19-20

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5059.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:55EFABBA-F43C-4AA5-8B50-776C46DEB1B5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5914273

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB6566-5951-7268-E592-FE5DFE9FFDDC

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gwynnagraecia Rentz, Su and Ueshima
status

gen. et sp. nov.

Gwynnagraecia Rentz, Su and Ueshima View in CoL Gen. et sp. nov.

Type species: Gwynnagraecia viridis Rentz, Su & Ueshima gen. et sp. nov., here designated.

11 Named after our colleague Prof Darryl T Gwynne to celebrate his retirement.

Common name. Gwynne’s Katydids

Gwynnagraecia gen . nov. is proposed to accommodate three small micropterous species mostly from coastal Western Australia. The genus is unique in several characters. It is small as are many other Western Australian katydids in the Agraeciini as well as in the Tettigoniinae ( Oligodectoides . Rentz, Nanodectes Rentz , see Rentz (1985)) and the Microtettigoniinae ( Microtettigonia , see Rentz (2001)). Males have a peculiar extension of the tenth abdominal tergite (acting as pseudocerci?) and the titillators are largely unsclerotised. Females have a long, straight ovipositor and are wingless. The genus bears a superficial resemblance to Australiagraecia gen . nov., p. 8 but the cerci are very different from any of the species in that genus and no Australiagraecia gen . nov. species has modification of the tenth abdominal tergite.

In addition to the odd extensions of the tenth tergite mentioned above, males have an exaggerated, ice-tong-like cercus which apparently fits into a modified pocket ( Fig. 11J View FIG ) during copulation (exception G. marandoo Gen. sp. nov., see p. 22). Vahed et al. (2014) commented on cerci of similar structure in other tettigoniids. They observed copulations in at least 44 species of Tettigoniidae . During mating males transfer a spermatophore consisting of two parts, the ejaculate which contains the ampulla containing the sperm) and the spermatophylax, a white sticky substance containing highly nutritious ingredients that are said to be essential in the successful development of eggs. Females feed on the spermatophylax after separating from mating. Vahed et al. concluded that tong-like cerci are associated with transfer of ejaculate during copulation. It appears that katydids with reduced spermatophylaxes bear extraordinarily adapted clasping cerci that, as a result, seem to prolong copulation and prevent the female from feeding on the spermatophylax. Unfortunately, we have not observed any mating in Gwynnagraecia gen . nov. or Australiagraecia gen . nov. that could test these hypotheses. These katydids are common in their environment that similar experiments could be conducted to determine if the hypothesis is true for members of the Agraeciini . It would be revealing to test this hypothesis with G. marandoo gen. et sp. nov. the only known species in the genus that does not have an exaggerated ice-tong-like male cercus.

Gwynnagraecia gen . nov. superficially resembles Australiagraecia , gen. nov., p. 8, a taxon with many species in the southern portion of Australia, see p. 67. The species we describe here can be identified using the descriptions and comparing the morphological characters figured.

Generic characters.

Size small for tribe, form robust. Male macropterous, females apterous. Head not especially slanting ( Fig. 10D View FIG ), jaws not abnormally large; frons smooth, shining, not pitted or carinate ( Fig. 10C View FIG ), genae similar to frons; median ocellus minute, positioned on triangular frontal fastigium, lateral ocelli absent. Eye ovoid, very large, situated high on head ( Figs 10B, C View FIG ); frontal fastigium absent; fastigium of vertex short, stout, with minute median sulcus not projecting above antennal scape; scape large, produced quadrate on dorsal internal margin, pedicel very small, not modified; flagellum thread-like, slightly longer than length of body. Pronotum short, slightly raised, surface smooth, without carinae or pits; lateral lobe shallow, ventral margin feebly undulate, not swollen over thoracic auditory foramen; anterior margin of disk feebly concave, posterior margin truncate. Male tegmen extending for most of its length beyond apex of pronotum. Stridulatory file ( Fig. 20E, F View FIG ); tegmen without costa, subcosta arching, widely separated from media. Prothorax armed with a pair of elongate spines; meso- and metathorax each with prominent tube-like projections. All legs normal. All femora clothed with dark setae dorsally, ventral surface unarmed on both margins; fore tibia short, slightly swollen apically, dorsal surface unarmed, ventral margin with 6 spines on both margins, the distal two much smaller than the others; middle tibia cylindrical. but slightly swollen, dorsal surface armed on posterior margin with 2 spines positioned at the extremities of the middle third, ventral surface armed similarly to fore tibia ( Figs.10L View FIG ). Hind tibia armed apically with a pair of dorsal and ventral spurs ( Figs 10J, K View FIG ). Genicular lobes unarmed. Abdomen normal, without any prominent ridges or modifications except for genitalia ( Figs 10E, N View FIG ). Male tenth tergite extraordinary, an elongate curved tong projecting from each side, apex specifically modified; median incision absent, margin continuous; cercus massive, shaft straight, with apical ice-tong-like hook; titillators without any sclerotised portions; subgenital plate elongate, with median carina, styles elongate, median incision shallow. Female tenth tergite with narrow median incision; cercus fairly robust; subgenital plate triangular, apex acute. Ovipositor very elongate, much longer than length of body, gracefully upcurved, unarmed.

Overall colour in life bright green, shining; abdomen with a pair of faint, thin, parallel stripes over most of the dorsal surface.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

Family

Tettigoniidae

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