Nabalua gogalai Duffels & Trilar, 2018

Tomi Trilar and Hans Duffels, 2018, A New Species Of Nabalua (Hemiptera: Cicadidae) From Mount Kinabalu, Borneo, Acta Entomologica Slovenica 26 (2), pp. 167-172 : 169-171

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.3676978

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3681527

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/831EEB30-C807-FFAF-62BD-FBC1FCD3F9A3

treatment provided by

Tatiana

scientific name

Nabalua gogalai Duffels & Trilar
status

sp. nov.

Nabalua gogalai Duffels & Trilar View in CoL n. sp.

Holotype male: ‘ Malaysia, Sabah’ / Kinabalu Nat. park / Park headquarters / 11.iv. 1999, Trilar leg. Paratypes: same data as the holotype but with different date: 14.iv. 1999, 1 male ; Malaysia, Sabah: Kinabalu Nat. Park, Park Headquarters , 1500 m, 29.vi.1996, T. Trilar, K. Prosenc leg., 1 male .

Description of the male

Markings on head, pronotum and mesonotum light brown but some parts darker brown.

Head ( Fig. 2 View Figs ). Vertex with trefoil shaped median marking enclosing the ocelli that is anteriorly broadly connected with the frontoclypeal suture. Apair of curved, dark brownish, semicircular fasciae reach from half-length of vertex to the vertex lobes. Inner margin of eye black with a recurved posterior end. Genae with black, transverse fascia reaching from postclypeus to half or two thirds of width of gena. Anterior and ventral parts of postclypeus with two series of 7-8 transverse brown streaks, medial ends of these streaks connected by a brown line.

Thorax ( Fig. 2 View Figs ). Pronotum with very narrow to narrow central fasciae that widen strongly to the anterior margin of the pronotum. Posterior ends of central fasciae fused in a distinct darker brown spot in front of the pronotum collar. Pronotum collar light brown to black-brown, its posterior margin black. One paratype with very narrow dark brown streaks above anterior oblique fissures. Areas between ambient fissure and posterior oblique fissures and between posterior and anterior oblique fissures dark coloured.

Mesonotum ( Fig. 2 View Figs ) light brown to brown with a narrow and vague median fascia, a pair of sharply delimited, slightly diverging, dark brown paramedian fasciae reaching to about half length of mesonotum, some yellowish colouring along outerside of paramedian fasciae and a pair of dark brown dots in front of anterior angles of cruciform elevation. Lateral fasciae indistinct.

Legs. Fore femur with an appressed spine at half length of underridge and a triangular spine close to the distal end. Outer side of fore femur with brown marking and with deep black spot distally of the triangular spine. Middle and hind femora with two long brownish lines. Apical part of tarsi of fore and middle legs dark brown.

Operculum ( Fig. 5 View Figs ) triangular with rounded right-angled laterodistal corner reaching to one third or one fourth of length of abdominal segment 3. Operculum 0. 94– 1.02 times as long as wide. Shortest distance between opercula 0.21–0.31 times as wide as operculum. Lateral margin very weakly undulate, distal margin fairly convex, medial margin rounded. Operculum without black-brown margin as found in other species of Nabalua .

Tegmina with brown spots on basal veins of 2 nd, 3 rd, 4 th, 5 th and 7 th apical areas and with smaller, lighter brown spots at the apices of the longitudinal veins of all apical areas.

Abdomen ( Fig. 3 View Figs ) very broad. The abdomen of the two paratypes are in natural position, with tergite 4 1.6 times as broad as width of head. The ventral side of the abdomen of the holotype is weakly incurved probably due to pressure from below on the abdomen during and after mounting. The abdomen of the holotype is therefore slightly more widened than the abdomen of the paratypes, with tergite 4 1.7 times as broad as width of head.

Tergites 2–7 shining brown, tergites 6–7 somewhat darker than other tergites. Timbal coverings ochraceous to light brownish with weakly convex or weakly undulate lateral margin, a weakly convex medial margin and a broadly rounded apical margin. Tergites 3–6 with a pair of sublateral brown patches enclosed by silvery or golden pilosity. Middle parts of posterior margins of all tergites with a narrow black-brown line. Sternites brown with exception of lateral parts of sternite 3 and medial parts of sternites 4 and 5. Sternites of abdominal segments 3, 4 and 5 with a pair of brown to dark brown tubercles. Tubercles on segment 3 long and narrow and attached to posterolateral corner of the sternite, those on segments 4 and 5 are short and thick and attached to two-thirds of lateral sternite margin.

Genitalia ( Fig. 4 View Figs ). Lateral lobes of pygofer very slightly protruding, apical part of lobes black-brown. Uncus very broad, lateraly convex and subapically narrowing to the broad apex.

Measurements in mm (n=3). Body length: 27.5–29 .4; tegmen length: 38.2–40.7; head width: 8.0–8.6; pronotum width: 8.3–9.5; head width: pronotum width 0.90– 0.96.

Ecology. All three specimens were collected in the Kinabalu Park Headquarter area. Two were collected on light, and the third one was sitting during the day on the leaf of a wild banana tree in the forest understorey and collected with an entomological net.

The Kinabalu Park Headquarter is located in the Lower Mountain Vegetation Zone which is covered with forest dominated by species of oaks ( Fagaceae ), conifers (especially Dacrycarpus and Phyllocladus ) and the myrtle ( Myrtaceae ) and tea ( Theaceae ) families. These trees reach a height of 25- 30 m. The temperature in this area is in average between 24°C to 18°C.

Etymology. This species is dedicated to our esteemed colleague and friend Matija Gogala at the occasion of his 80th birthday.

Bioacoustics. All three N. gogalai males collected were put in a cage mounted on a branch of a leafy tree, hoping that it will start singing provoked by the wild cicadas singing in the neighbourhood. We had success with some other species but not with N. gogalai , so we do not know how the species is singing.

Biogeography. The new species has been collected on Mount Kinabalu, like four other species of the genus that are all restricted to higher localities in northern Borneo like Mt Kinabalu and Mt Dullit. One species of Nabalua seems to be endemic to the Cameron Highlands in the Malayan Peninsula and one species is only known from one locality in North Sumatra.

The holotype is deposited in the Slovenian Museum of Natural History, Ljubljana, Slovenia; both paratypes are deposited in the Centre for Insect Systematics of the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM), Bangi, Malaysia.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Cicadidae

Genus

Nabalua

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