Lebinthus bitaeniatus Stål, 1877

Robillard, Tony & Tan, Ming Kai, 2013, A Taxonomic Review Of Common But Little Known Crickets From Singapore And The Philippines (Insecta: Orthoptera: Eneopterinae), Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 61 (2), pp. 705-725 : 712-718

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5352760

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AA06878A-FFD7-0545-FBA8-FD5EFE7EFBF5

treatment provided by

Tatiana

scientific name

Lebinthus bitaeniatus Stål, 1877
status

 

Lebinthus bitaeniatus Stål, 1877 View in CoL

( Figs. 10 View Fig , 11A–D View Fig , 12A–C View Fig , 13A, B View Fig , 14A–C View Fig , 15A–C View Fig , 16 View Fig )

Lebinthus bitaeniatus Stål, 1877: 50 View in CoL ; Bolívar, 1889: 425; Chopard, 1968: 354; Robillard & Desutter-Grandcolas, 2004a: 275; 2006: 644; 2008: 67 (phylogeny and taxonomy)

Synonym names

Paraeneopterus bitaeniatus Saussure, 1878 View in CoL

Paraeneopterus bitaeniatus Saussure, 1878: 334 View in CoL ; Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1898: 279; Chopard, 1968: 355

Lebinthus bitaeniatus View in CoL – Robillard & Desutter-Grandcolas, 2008: 67 >> Paraeneopterus bitaeniatus View in CoL , replaced by Lebinthus saussureii , synonym of L. bitaeniatus View in CoL

Lebinthus saussureii Bolívar, 1889

Lebinthus saussurei Bolívar, 1889: 425 View in CoL

Paraeneopterus bitaeniatus View in CoL – Chopard, 1968: 355

Lebinthus bitaeniatus View in CoL – Robillard & Desutter-Grandcolas, 2008: 67> synonym of L. bitaeniatus View in CoL

Discussion. — Most Lebinthus specimens showing lateral yellow bands along the whole body have generally been identified as L. bitaeniatus by previous authors. However, close re-examination using modern taxonomic criteria suggests that many different species are probably mixed under L. bitaeniatus , such as L. luae Robillard & Tan , new species from Singapore and South Sumatra, L. bifasciatus Chopard, 1951 from Australia and L. lanyuensis Oshiro, 1996 from Taiwan. Combined to close examination of morphology, acoustic analysis of calling songs ( Table 2) and molecular analyses reveal clear differences between L. bitaeniatus and L. luae .

Material examined. — Holotype (female): Philippines: Ins. Philipp., semper, 24-25/5-64 ( NHRM-ORTH0012705 ) (examined on photograph, see Fig. 10 View Fig ).

Other material examined. Philippines: 2 females ( BPBM) , Luzon, Los Banos, Mount Makiling , coll. C. M. Yoshimoto, 17 Sep.1959 ; 1 male ( BPBM) , Luzon, Los Banos, Mount Makiling , coll. C. M. Yoshimoto, 19 Sep.1959 ; 2 males ( MNHN: TR145 View Materials , 151 View Materials ) , 2 females ( MNHN: TR146 View Materials , 147 View Materials ) , 2 juveniles ( MNHN: TR15 View Materials , 154 View Materials ) , on leaf litter, 1 female ( MNHN: TR127 View Materials ) , on plant (h = 10 cm), 2 males ( UPLB MNH: TR144 View Materials , 228 View Materials ) , 3 females ( UPLB MNH: TR148 View Materials , 149 View Materials , 150 View Materials ) , 2 juveniles ( UPLB MNH: TR153 View Materials , 155 View Materials ) , leaf litter, 2 males ( UPLB MNH: TR142 View Materials , 143 View Materials ) , on low plant, Luzon, Los Baňos, Laguna, Mount Makiling , base, Flat Rock , West of Mulawin Creek , secondary forest, 14°08'50.2"N, 121°13'41.5"E, 244 m, coll. T. Robillard, 28 Jun.2011, all night GoogleMaps ; 3 males ( MNHN: TR81 View Materials , 84 View Materials , 85 View Materials ) , leaf litter, night, 1 male ( MNHN: TR86 View Materials ) , on plant (h = 10 cm), night, 1 male ( MNHN: TR81 View Materials ) , leaf litter, day, 1 male ( MNHN-ENSIF3197 : TR124), call recording, leaf litter, day , 1 male ( MNHN-ENSIF3196 : TR266), call recording, on plant (h = 30 cm), day , 1 male ( MNHN: TR87 View Materials ) , on plant (h = 80 cm), day, 1 juvenile ( MNHN: TR107 View Materials ) , leaf litter, day, 1 male ( UPLB MNH: TR04 View Materials ) , 2 females ( UPLB MNH: TR105 View Materials , 106 View Materials ) , on plant (h = 30 cm), day, 1 juvenile ( UPLB MNH: TR282 View Materials ) , leaf litter, night, Luzon, Los Baňos, Laguna, Mount Makiling , base, secondary forest on campus, 14°09'12.9"N, 121°14'05.0"E, 168 m, coll. T. Robillard, 27 Jun.2011 – 3 Jul.2011 GoogleMaps ; 1 male ( MNHN: TR230 View Materials ) , 1 female ( MNHN: TR233 View Materials ) , on plant (h = 30 cm), 1 female ( MNHN: TR235 View Materials ) , on plant (h = 1 m), 1 female ( MNHN: TR219 View Materials ) , on plant (h = 1.7 m), 1 male ( ZRC: TR227 View Materials ) , on plant, 1 female ( ZRC: TR231 View Materials ) , on plant (h = 1 m), 1 male ( UPLB MNH: TR229 View Materials ) , on plant (h = 30 cm), 1 male ( UPLB MNH: TR234 View Materials ) , 1 female ( UPLB MNH: TR232 View Materials ) , on plant (h = 1 m), Luzon, Los Baňos, Laguna, Mount Makiling , base, East of Mulawin Creek , secondary forest, 14°08'51,6"N, 121°13'46,7"E, 182 m, coll. T. Robillard, 29 Jun.2011 GoogleMaps ; 2 males ( MNHN: TR181 View Materials , 182 View Materials ) , 1 female ( MNHN: TR183 View Materials ) , grassland, Luzon, Los Baňos , Laguna, arboretum, 14°09'52,8"N, 121°14'17,1"E, 45 m, coll. T. Robillard, 29 Jun.2011, all day GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. — Species similar to L. luae new species, but differing by general shape more slender, lighter colouration, with a yellow longitudinal band along the body thinner and underlined ventrally by a narrow black line; male genitalia differ by details and proportions and by strong M-shaped sclerotisation of ectophallic fold, absent in L. luae , but close to that of other species (ex: L. cyclopus Robillard , L. truncatipennis Chopard : Robillard, 2010).

Redescription. — Species of average size for the genus, of slender shape. Colouration contrasting, with brown and dark brown areas and with narrow dorso-lateral yellow longitudinal bands along the whole body ( Fig. 11A–D View Fig ). Head dorsum yellow brown with 6 dark brown longitudinal bands more or less distinct ( Fig. 12A–C View Fig ). Fastigium wider than long, setose, dark brown, apex yellow with two wide black spots on facial part almost touching each other. Scapes yellow and brown; antennae brown. Face variable, from yellow brown to darker brown. Epistomal suture yellow. Mouthparts yellow brown, including maxillary palpi. Lateral part of head with a yellow area posterior to eye, underlined by a black band, then progressively lighter from dorsal to ventral region. Pronotum: dorsal disk yellow brown to brown, slightly mottled with brown, with black spots and with short black longitudinal lines on posterior apex; lateral edges yellow. Lateral lobes dark brown to black dorsally and progressively lighter ventrally. Legs I and II light brown to yellow brown, femora with brown spots and longitudinal patterns, tibiae with rings. FIII brown, sometimes with dark spots and with striated dark patterns on outer faces; hind knees black; hind tibiae black with yellow rings. For all pairs of legs, Ta1 and Ta3 yellow basally, dark brown apically. Abdomen homogeneously dark brown dorsally, covered with golden setae, lateral edges with yellow or whitish longitudinal bands. Sternites yellowish brown, with dark brown patterns laterally. Cerci yellowish basally, with black rings near apex, their ventral side black.

Male: FWs not reaching abdomen mid-length ( Fig. 13A, B View Fig ). FW colouration: Cells and veins brown, not translucent; angle between dorsal and lateral fields forming a narrow band, whitish to yellow, including basis and distal part of CuA (rest of CuA dark brown), basis of MP, CuA/MP area, and half MA/MP area; lateral field with a thin black line underlying the yellow longitudinal band, then brown ventrally; small median fold not included in the pale longitudinal band. FW venation ( Fig. 13A View Fig ): 1A angle wide (>100°); stridulatory file with 138–144 teeth (m = 141, n = 2), located on transverse and longitudinal parts of 1A. CuP absent. Area posterior to plectrum strongly sclerotised. Harp wide, with a longitudinal fold near angle of 1A (claval fold?); with 1 harp vein, sometimes bifurcated distally. Distal part of CuA straight. Mirror (d1) not differentiated, resembling the other few cells of D alignment. Apical field absent, with no bifurcation of CuA posterior to diagonal vein. Lateral field with 5 strong longitudinal veins including MA, R and 3 more ventral veins; latero-dorsal angle made by MP; R without strong bifurcating veins. Subgenital plate elongate, clog-shaped.

Male genitalia ( Fig. 14 View Fig ): Pseudepiphallic sclerite trapezoidal, convex dorsally, its apex slightly trilobate, including a short median expansion and 2 small lophi barely individualised, slightly divergent and finely setose. Anterior margin bisinuated, with a median indentation. Rami short, half as long as pseudepiphallic sclerite. Pseudepiphallic parameres with a long sclerotised basis, trilobate, including a posterodorsal lobe and two ventral ones, the posterior lobe square, the anterior one curved anteriorly and pointed, slightly denticulate. Ectophallic arc complete and wide. Ectophallic fold wide and triangular, with a wide M-shaped sclerotisation; apex membranous. Ectophallic apodemes long and parallel, exceeding anterior margin of pseudepiphallus. Bases of ectophallic apodemes with a pair of ventral membranous expansions, with a small apical sclerite. Endophallic sclerite long, exceeding anterior margin of pseudepiphallus, convex dorsally, its posterior apex with a small median triangular expansion and with short thick lateral arms; endophallic apodeme made of a narrow median crest.

Female: FWs short ( Fig. 13B View Fig ), slightly longer than pronotum, slightly overlapping basally; dorsal field grey brown, with 5–6 (n = 4; HTF = 6) strong, orange brown parallel longitudinal veins and weak cream transverse veins. Lateral angle of FWs with a narrow yellow longitudinal band including a faint vein. Lateral field with 3–4 (n = 4) strong straight longitudinal veins.

Female genitalia: Ovipositor almost as long as hind femora; apex lanceolate, denticulate on dorsal edge ( Fig. 7B View Fig ). Copulatory papilla ( Fig. 7E View Fig ) conical, with a narrow basal sclerotised area on ventral face; apex rounded, sclerotised. Juvenile: Similar to adults in colouration, light brown.

Life history traits: L. bitaeniatus is a diurnal species living in secondary habitats or open areas in forest ( Fig. 15C View Fig ). Males sing from low plants above the leaf litter from early morning to dusk. Mating couples are generally observed during day and night on plant leaves or on top of the litter ( Fig. 15A–C View Fig ).

Behaviour. Calling song ( Fig. 16 View Fig ; Table 2): In the field (n = 2; t°C = 27.5–28.5°C) the calling song of L. bitaeniatus lasts for 11.3 ± 5.1 s and is made of very indented syllables. This echeme is organised in two parts, the initial one consisting of 35 ± 15 longer, well-spaced syllables (longer duration = 42 ± 10 ms and period = 273 ± 212 ms), the second part being a short trill made of 41 ± 8 shorter syllables set closer together (shorter duration = 11 ± 5 ms and period = 16 ± 6 ms). Each syllable is made of discrete pulses, produced by regular plectrum pauses, which in turn are caused by a discontinuous closing phase. Such a pattern produces a broad band spectrum between 12 and 30 kHz), with main energy centred at nearly 19.9 ± 1.3 kHz, which corresponds to the first and only peak of the spectrum.

Measurements. See Table 3.

BPBM

Bishop Museum

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

UPLB

Museum of Natural History, University of the Philippines

MNH

Musei Nacionalis Hungarici

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

ZRC

Zoological Reference Collection, National University of Singapore

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

Family

Gryllidae

Genus

Lebinthus

Loc

Lebinthus bitaeniatus Stål, 1877

Robillard, Tony & Tan, Ming Kai 2013
2013
Loc

Paraeneopterus bitaeniatus

Chopard, L 1968: 355
1968
Loc

Lebinthus saussurei Bolívar, 1889: 425

Bolivar, I 1889: 425
1889
Loc

Paraeneopterus bitaeniatus

Chopard, L 1968: 355
Saussure, H 1878: 334
1878
Loc

Lebinthus bitaeniatus Stål, 1877: 50

Chopard, L 1968: 354
Bolivar, I 1889: 425
Stal, C 1877: 50
1877
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